RE: ISSUE-115: Mixing of security information and content in non-visual environments? [Techniques]

I am not expert on how we currently handle non-visual environments, but one
could approach this in a similar manner. For example, when a
visually-impaired user accesses a page which is audio only; the page could
be broken into two pieces. The first piece would be a heading/preface that
cannot be modified by the webservice, provides security and other chrome
info and is spoken by a distinctive voice that differs from the rest of the
spoken web page, the content

-----Original Message-----
From: public-wsc-wg-request@w3.org [mailto:public-wsc-wg-request@w3.org] On
Behalf Of Web Security Context Working Group Issue Tracker
Sent: Wednesday, October 03, 2007 11:48 AM
To: public-wsc-wg@w3.org
Subject: ISSUE-115: Mixing of security information and content in non-visual
environments? [Techniques]



ISSUE-115: Mixing of security information and content in non-visual
environments? [Techniques]

http://www.w3.org/2006/WSC/track/issues/

Raised by: Thomas Roessler
On product: Techniques

We currently have material concerning the mixing of security information and
context in non-visual environments. Is there a useful generalization of the
requirement to non-visual UIs? Are there problematic known cases similar to
the location bar favicon mix known for, e.g., screen readers?

Received on Wednesday, 3 October 2007 16:01:45 UTC