14:08:50 RRSAgent has joined #ag 14:08:55 logging to https://www.w3.org/2026/05/05-ag-irc 14:08:55 RRSAgent, make logs Public 14:08:56 Meeting: AGWG Teleconference 14:09:00 chair:alastairc 14:09:04 present:alastairc 14:09:07 agenda? 14:09:24 agenda+ WCAG 2 proposed changes https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/w3c-wai-gl/2026AprJun/0012.html 14:09:33 agenda+ WCAG 3 introduction text https://www.w3.org/wbs/35422/about_26/?login= 14:09:57 Revisit Assertions https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1qWuFM3fFgC_e1Jik05Os11O0Rl86HLDXu9dolwyWWtc/edit?slide=id.g3d460567fce_0_6#slide=id.g3d460567fce_0_6 14:10:19 agenda+ Good enough" conversation https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1-124T8uEc9H6xAEB-ezcanXb34TNjemHcWWr7T5p1MU/edit?slide=id.p#slide=id.p 14:10:29 agenda+ Review survey responses https://www.w3.org/wbs/35422/wcag3-provision-survey-02/ 14:10:34 agenda? 14:11:00 agenda+ Revisit Assertions https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1qWuFM3fFgC_e1Jik05Os11O0Rl86HLDXu9dolwyWWtc/edit?slide=id.g3d460567fce_0_6#slide=id.g3d460567fce_0_6 14:11:49 zakim, agenda order is 1,2,5,3,4 14:11:49 ok, alastairc 14:11:53 agenda? 14:12:28 TOPIC: Introductions and Announcements 14:12:38 RRSAgent, make minutes 14:12:40 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2026/05/05-ag-minutes.html alastairc 14:13:21 s/Revisit Assertions https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1qWuFM3fFgC_e1Jik05Os11O0Rl86HLDXu9dolwyWWtc/edit?slide=id.g3d460567fce_0_6#slide=id.g3d460567fce_0_6 / 14:13:27 agenda? 14:20:05 GreggVan has joined #ag 14:43:53 Patrick_H_Lauke has joined #ag 14:46:48 Patrick_H_Lauke has joined #ag 14:46:48 GreggVan has joined #ag 14:46:48 laura has joined #ag 14:46:48 kirkwood has joined #ag 14:46:48 jedi has joined #ag 14:46:48 hdv has joined #ag 14:46:48 Rachael has joined #ag 14:46:48 JeroenH has joined #ag 14:46:48 alice has joined #ag 14:46:48 Adam has joined #ag 14:46:48 Eloisa has joined #ag 14:46:48 alastairc has joined #ag 14:53:31 ShawnT has joined #ag 14:54:28 Patrick_H_Lauke has joined #ag 14:54:28 GreggVan has joined #ag 14:54:28 laura has joined #ag 14:54:28 kirkwood has joined #ag 14:54:28 jedi has joined #ag 14:54:28 hdv has joined #ag 14:54:28 Rachael has joined #ag 14:54:28 JeroenH has joined #ag 14:54:28 alice has joined #ag 14:54:28 Adam has joined #ag 14:54:28 Eloisa has joined #ag 14:54:28 alastairc has joined #ag 14:56:57 Patrick_H_Lauke has joined #ag 14:56:57 GreggVan has joined #ag 14:56:57 laura has joined #ag 14:56:57 kirkwood has joined #ag 14:56:57 jedi has joined #ag 14:56:57 hdv has joined #ag 14:56:57 Rachael has joined #ag 14:56:57 JeroenH has joined #ag 14:56:57 alice has joined #ag 14:56:57 Adam has joined #ag 14:56:57 Eloisa has joined #ag 14:56:57 alastairc has joined #ag 14:57:02 janina has joined #ag 14:57:02 Patrick_H_Lauke has joined #ag 14:57:02 GreggVan has joined #ag 14:57:02 laura has joined #ag 14:57:02 kirkwood has joined #ag 14:57:02 jedi has joined #ag 14:57:02 hdv has joined #ag 14:57:02 Rachael has joined #ag 14:57:02 JeroenH has joined #ag 14:57:02 alice has joined #ag 14:57:02 Adam has joined #ag 14:57:02 Eloisa has joined #ag 14:57:02 alastairc has joined #ag 14:57:09 present+ 14:57:22 present+ Laura_Carlson 14:57:36 Scribe: laura 14:57:58 present+ 14:58:28 erinevans has joined #ag 14:58:46 LenB has joined #ag 14:59:34 Dirk has joined #ag 15:00:09 present+ 15:00:17 present+ 15:00:17 bbailey has joined #ag 15:00:24 present+ 15:00:38 Heather has joined #ag 15:00:47 present+ 15:00:53 Anton has joined #ag 15:01:14 AWK has joined #ag 15:01:15 present+ 15:01:18 present+ 15:01:26 filippo-zorzi has joined #ag 15:01:33 Jennie_Delisi has joined #ag 15:01:37 present+ 15:01:44 present+ 15:01:57 joryc has joined #ag 15:02:02 Charles has joined #ag 15:02:11 sam-estoesta has joined #ag 15:02:13 present+ 15:02:20 present+ 15:02:22 present+ 15:02:28 AC: Any new members? 15:02:37 present+ 15:02:38 scott has joined #ag 15:02:38 present+ 15:02:44 present+ 15:02:49 present+ 15:02:54 Ben_Tillyer has joined #ag 15:03:08 RM: Just a reminder that next week we are holding a 2 day session, and it will replace all ag related meetings. 15:03:12 present+ 15:03:14 GN015 has joined #ag 15:03:30 zakim, take up next item 15:03:30 agendum 1 -- WCAG 2 proposed changes https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/w3c-wai-gl/2026AprJun/0012.html -- taken up [from alastairc] 15:03:34 AC: the meetings have been added to the calandar. 15:03:45 present+ 15:03:51 BrianE has joined #ag 15:03:57 julierawe has joined #ag 15:04:01 present+ 15:04:06 present+ 15:04:12 CClaire has joined #ag 15:04:13 present+ 15:04:17 present+ 15:04:24 Makoto_U has joined #ag 15:04:27 stevef has joined #ag 15:04:36 present+ 15:04:38 present+ 15:04:48 PL: you still have until 11th of May to on the proposed changes 15:05:08 ... Two errata, one very, very minor, one quite substantive. 15:05:12 The emailthat went out https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/w3c-wai-gl/2026AprJun/0012.html 15:05:18 Consistency: use "touchscreen" rather than "touch screen" (normative) 15:05:18 #5038 https://github.com/w3c/wcag/pull/5038 15:05:19 ... which are the ones that we have been working on putting them aside for a potential WCAG 2.3, but both of those have kind of. 15:05:32 Azlan has joined #ag 15:05:34 ... kicked off some discussion in the pull requests themselves, which I thought might be more appropriate to have with a wider group about what is or isn't appropriate. 15:05:42 present+ 15:05:45 Update normative wording of 4.1.3 and definition of "status message" 15:05:45 #4952 https://github.com/w3c/wcag/pull/4952 15:06:04 Detlev has joined #ag 15:06:20 AC: one character change, adding a space in touchscreen. 15:06:36 present+ 15:06:39 nat_tarnoff has joined #ag 15:06:41 AC: And the second one was more substantive. 15:06:45 giacomo-petri has joined #ag 15:06:48 present+ 15:07:12 present+ 15:07:12 Monica has joined #AG 15:07:22 ... Whenever the task force comes up with a normative update e can consider it for ertata 15:07:33 jtoles has joined #ag 15:07:39 present+ 15:07:44 ... any things like that will come through a CFC process. 15:07:46 maryjom has joined #ag 15:07:59 Francis_Storr has joined #ag 15:08:02 zakim, take up next item 15:08:02 agendum 2 -- WCAG 3 introduction text https://www.w3.org/wbs/35422/about_26/?login= -- taken up [from alastairc] 15:08:04 q+ 15:08:11 present+ 15:08:40 present+ 15:08:43 present+ 15:08:47 awk: is this a fyi or a question? 15:09:02 q- 15:09:06 AC: a FYI 15:09:16 LoriO has joined #AG 15:09:27 present+ 15:09:28 it was intended as an answer to "why are we doing this? is this even an erratum?" questions in the PRs 15:09:50 About proposal https://docs.google.com/document/d/14o2AZdRF5zzi-x9qfMjEB-1G02yV_rmx_WRztM4v-sw/edit?usp=sharing 15:09:55 present+ 15:11:21 RM: so I went through all the comments, and I've pulled them in to a revision that you have the link for. 15:11:39 The WCAG 3 guidelines address the accessibility of user facing digital content on a wide variety of devices such as desktops, laptops, tablets, phones, and wearables. 15:11:44 Does this language cover things like audio only devices? 15:11:52 Jen_G has joined #ag 15:12:04 Present+ 15:12:06 "such as" it not limiting, it's just trying to give examples 15:12:24 +1 for that change 15:12:30 user facing should be user-facing 15:12:33 ... big concern people had with the word devices as written. Other suggestions was just adding the word other before devices. 15:12:33 q+ 15:13:21 +1 to alastairc as a response to my comment. 15:13:29 ack GreggVan 15:13:45 (RM goes though document) 15:14:08 "for example" sounds good to me 15:14:20 Gregg: English language is such that not everybody knows what such as means. 15:14:35 +1 for example 15:14:48 rather than “devices” say “other devices” 15:14:53 maybe even add an em or en dash in front of "including" 15:14:56 +1 for "including but not limited to" 15:15:02 ... could say a wide variety of devices, including but not limited to, 15:15:06 +1 for example, simpler language 15:15:06 +1 to not limited to 15:15:12 +1 "including but not limited to" 15:15:12 +1 for "including but not limited to" 15:15:13 +1 including but not limited to 15:15:16 +1 to not limited 15:15:17 +1 for example 15:15:19 +1 for example, simpler 15:15:20 +1 not limited to 15:15:23 0 15:15:26 0 15:15:27 0 15:15:27 +1 for "including but not limited to" 15:15:28 0 15:15:29 0 15:15:29 0 15:15:32 +1 for example, plainer 15:15:32 +1 for example 15:15:34 0 15:15:36 0 15:15:39 0 15:15:40 0 15:16:09 Gez has joined #AG 15:16:15 present+ 15:16:20 nope 15:16:24 (it will look a bit heavy-handed having that construct in both sentences perhaps) 15:16:40 q+ 15:16:54 ack GreggVan 15:17:15 LauraM has joined #AG 15:17:16 Steve: I would object, for example is simpler 15:17:28 q+ 15:17:36 Gregg: It has caused problems in the past. 15:17:37 q+ 15:17:39 present+ 15:17:42 So is this text meant to be normative? 15:17:56 Steve: Is this a normative statement? 15:18:13 ack kirkwood 15:18:14 +1 to gregg's experience that "for example" is not explicit enough in practice 15:18:15 q+ stevef 15:18:28 +1 to Julie's comment 15:18:29 Julie: could be agree to this for now and come back to it later? 15:18:30 ack julierawe 15:18:31 q+ 15:18:35 ack stevef 15:19:02 JK: Just quickly, I think you said it correctly, where it said, and other devices, but... 15:19:02 It reads just as devices, and 15:19:14 atya has joined #AG 15:19:24 q+ 15:19:25 AC: it is informative. 15:19:26 https://www.w3.org/TR/wcag3/#introduction 15:19:26 shadi has joined #ag 15:19:38 ack Ben_Tillyer 15:19:44 Patrick_H_Lauke has left #ag 15:19:47 +1 to stevef comment as informative. 15:19:48 present+ 15:19:55 Steve: It shouldn't be taken by... 15:19:56 by anybody as... as being, you know, normative in the case of it. 15:20:15 Just asked google and apparently using "for example" has caused problems - not all judges are well-versed in the English language apparently. 15:20:37 Ben: I think I personally like Julie, was it Julie's comment of pick one and then revisit later. 15:20:40 ack GreggVan 15:20:44 jkatherman has joined #ag 15:20:53 present+ 15:20:57 But still +1 for casual language for informative content. We've already read this paragraph more than anyone outside the group ever will 15:21:16 RRSAgent, pointer? 15:21:16 See https://www.w3.org/2026/05/05-ag-irc#T15-21-16 15:21:26 q+ 15:21:45 Gregg: plain language always does not mean fewer words. It means easier to understand and harder to misunderstand. 15:21:48 ack Rachael 15:22:13 q+ 15:22:14 RM: l've put in 3 different versions that I believe now expand it and make it clear. 15:22:16 opinion: not a fan of “etc.” even in informative text. it has several adopted meanings. 15:22:25 Number three is not clear due to use of "etc." 15:22:31 ack kevin 15:22:53 The WCAG 3 guidelines address the accessibility of user- facing digital content on a wide variety of devices including, but not limited to, desktops, laptops, tablets, phones, and wearables. 15:22:56 +1 to 2nd 15:23:00 2. The WCAG 3 guidelines address the accessibility of user- facing digital content on a wide variety of devices, for example desktops, laptops, tablets, phones, and other devices. 15:23:43 no objection, prefer 2nd as simpler. 15:23:49 0 15:23:50 no objection. As it is informational I lean 2. 15:23:51 Kevin: ETC is not include that in the style guide. 15:23:52 0 15:23:52 +1 15:23:58 2 15:24:00 2 15:24:02 1 15:24:02 2 15:24:02 1 15:24:04 1 15:24:04 +1 15:24:08 1 15:24:08 1 15:24:09 1 15:24:10 2 15:24:10 1 15:24:10 1 15:24:13 don't care 15:24:14 1 15:24:16 2 15:24:19 0 15:24:20 1 15:24:20 Patrick_H_Lauke has joined #ag 15:24:21 0 15:24:22 0 15:24:23 0 15:24:23 0 15:24:25 1 15:24:27 1 15:24:28 2 15:24:28 0 15:24:29 1 15:24:30 1 15:24:40 Patrick_H_Lauke has left #ag 15:24:56 s/ETC is not include that in the style guide./In the new style guide that WAI is preparing, we discourage "etc." and the suggested substitute for it _is_ "such as"/ 15:25:50 q+ 15:26:18 q+ 15:27:10 Francis_Storr has joined #ag 15:27:10 Azlan has joined #ag 15:27:10 BrianE has joined #ag 15:27:11 GreggVan has joined #ag 15:27:11 laura has joined #ag 15:27:11 kirkwood has joined #ag 15:27:11 jedi has joined #ag 15:27:11 hdv has joined #ag 15:27:11 Rachael has joined #ag 15:27:11 JeroenH has joined #ag 15:27:11 alice has joined #ag 15:27:11 Adam has joined #ag 15:27:11 Eloisa has joined #ag 15:27:11 alastairc has joined #ag 15:27:12 imirfan has joined #ag 15:27:25 q+ 15:28:22 q+ 15:28:46 q? 15:28:52 +1 to avoiding "guidelines" because WCAG2 using "guidelines" three different ways has sometimes caused mild confusion 15:28:53 The 'G' in "WCAG" stands for "Guidelines", doesn't it? 15:28:54 zakim, who's here? 15:28:54 Present: alastairc, janina, Laura_Carlson, Eloisa, Patrick_H_Lauke, erinevans, bbailey, Heather, ShawnT, AWK, Jennie_Delisi, filippo-zorzi, Charles, GreggVan, sam-estoesta, Dirk, 15:28:57 ... kevin, joryc, scott, kirkwood, Adam, julierawe, Rachael, BrianE, CClaire, Makoto_U, stevef, Anton, Detlev, giacomo-petri, Azlan, jtoles, Francis_Storr, nat_tarnoff, Monica, 15:28:57 ... LoriO, Ben_Tillyer, Jen_G, Gez, LauraM, shadi, jkatherman 15:28:57 On IRC I see imirfan, jkatherman, shadi, atya, LauraM, Gez, Jen_G, LoriO, maryjom, jtoles, Monica, giacomo-petri, nat_tarnoff, Detlev, stevef, Makoto_U, CClaire, julierawe, GN015, 15:29:01 ... Ben_Tillyer, scott, sam-estoesta, Charles, joryc, Jennie_Delisi, filippo-zorzi, AWK, Anton, Heather, bbailey, Dirk, LenB, erinevans, janina, ShawnT, RRSAgent, Zakim, tzviya, 15:29:01 ... kevin, Daniel, Remi, Tamsin, kenneth, srvjordi 15:29:12 agenda? 15:30:07 Francis_Storr has joined #ag 15:30:07 Azlan has joined #ag 15:30:07 BrianE has joined #ag 15:30:07 GreggVan has joined #ag 15:30:07 laura has joined #ag 15:30:07 kirkwood has joined #ag 15:30:07 jedi has joined #ag 15:30:07 hdv has joined #ag 15:30:07 Rachael has joined #ag 15:30:07 JeroenH has joined #ag 15:30:07 alice has joined #ag 15:30:07 Adam has joined #ag 15:30:07 Eloisa has joined #ag 15:30:07 alastairc has joined #ag 15:30:24 q? 15:30:28 ack GN 15:30:39 ack GreggVan 15:31:11 CH: Just a quick thought to Greg's comment about reusing the word guidelines. The second instance could say guidance. 15:31:15 +1 for "guidance" rather than "guidelines" 15:31:20 q+ 15:31:43 “maximally accessible”? 15:31:49 ...where it says: as applicable as possible. I'm curious, to whom is it possible, and do we use that language anywhere else? 15:32:02 er, “maximally applicable” 15:32:12 ... what is the limitation of what's possible? 15:32:31 ack Charles 15:32:33 q+ 15:32:36 "as applicable as possible" is not in use in WCAG 3.0 15:32:39 ack GreggVan 15:32:46 RM: Mary Jo raised the point that provisions is a legal language, and maybe we don't want to put that here, nor is it consistent, so l've just replaced provisions with guidelines, so everything is consistent throughout. 15:33:10 q- 15:33:23 q+ 15:33:28 I disagree with Gregg's take as to the meaning 15:33:29 including but not limited to ? 15:33:32 ack kenneth 15:33:40 Gregg: making it as wide as possible. If you take off the as possible, and then you put including those two things, it means that it's only those two things and absolutely nothing else, because it says not It just says there's a wide range, including these two things, period, and there's nothing there telling you that it's anything more than that. 15:33:51 suggestion: WCAG 3.0 provides a broadened, comprehensive a set of provisions for web technologies. 15:34:31 ack LoriO 15:34:34 note: “as applicable as possible” occurs in the prior section for types of content and then again as web and non web technologies. 15:34:37 Ken: On the topic of the WCAG 3 guidelines wondering whether we even need the word. I mean, the suggestion of guidance rather than guidelines also works 15:34:59 present+ 15:35:11 +1 to Rachael 15:35:20 q+ to say "agree not 15:35:21 q? 15:35:25 ack GreggVan 15:35:25 GreggVan, you wanted to say "agree not 15:35:26 one distinction I have seen is "where practical" or "where feasible" (with the later being the higher bar) 15:35:46 LO: RE: applicable as possible is not in use in WCAG 15:35:46 3.0. But since we're wordsmithing, does this mean, in general, that if it's not already in use in 3.0, we can't use it? Or what... what exactly does that mean? 15:36:22 RM: I don't think it actually is relevant. We are writing this document and revising it, so. If we wanted to compare it and see how we had used it elsewhere as part of the conversation, that's helpful, but I don't think it stops us from using a phrase if it's not elsewhere. 15:36:34 q? 15:36:35 Suggested rewrite to avoid "as possible" in either sentence: "WCAG 3.0 aims to cover web technologies thoroughly. It’s also written so it can apply to many non-web technologies—including but not limited to non-web documents native desktop and mobile software—but it doesn’t fully cover those areas yet." 15:36:54 q+ 15:37:04 Gregg: I still think a set of provisions works. 15:37:15 ack Rachael 15:37:22 My understanding is that comprehensive means "all, or almost all, the items". A quick check of Oxford English Dictionary backs that up 15:37:26 "Provides provisions" sounds awkward. 15:37:43 https://w3c.github.io/wcag3/guidelines/#types-of-provision 15:37:44 WCAG 3.0 provides guidance for web technologies that is as comprehensive as possible. 15:37:50 +1 15:37:56 RM: I believe we have a definition, at least working somewhere for provisions that states that it is what we're using when we talk about requirements and assertions. 15:38:01 either way 15:38:02 no objection to either 15:38:05 ... we could link to that. 15:38:05 +1 to rachael 15:38:08 ready to let the editors edit 15:38:18 grin 15:38:53 RM: next change that was suggested was getting rid of the word platforms, because some people are going to find that complex. 15:39:15 q+ 15:39:57 ack lor 15:40:15 SydneyColeman has joined #ag 15:40:21 present+ 15:40:34 +1 to oxford comma 15:40:35 LO: shouldn't that be... 15:40:35 Documents, comma, remove the AND. 15:41:13 zakim, take up next item 15:41:13 agendum 5 -- Revisit Assertions https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1qWuFM3fFgC_e1Jik05Os11O0Rl86HLDXu9dolwyWWtc/edit?slide=id.g3d460567fce_0_6#slide=id.g3d460567fce_0_6 -- 15:41:16 ... taken up [from alastairc] 15:41:20 RM: does anyone have any concerns with us moving forward with the content we have as written? 15:41:28 (None) 15:42:04 AC: Coming back to assertions. 15:42:24 ... assertions is a new thing in WCAG 3. 15:42:24 Where we're asking people to say they have done a thing, usually a process, 15:43:03 q+ 15:43:57 ack GreggVan 15:44:58 q+ to ask for clarification on first bullet 15:45:04 ack bbailey 15:45:04 bbailey, you wanted to ask for clarification on first bullet 15:45:37 AC: We have had some responses (goes though slide 24) 15:46:59 ... like a success criteria or a requirement where you're saying, on this page, it passes this requirement, so that would be an outcome. whereas if you're saying, we have done this process, that process doesn't necessarily result in any particular outcome. 15:47:52 AC: Goes over slide 25 15:48:41 q+ 15:48:49 ack GreggVan 15:48:52 q+ 15:49:10 assertions speak to LOE rather than compliance: for legal protection 15:49:24 LOE? 15:49:32 ... we need to make sure we're differentiating these sufficiently. they're not intended to be compliance guarantees. 15:49:36 (level of effort) 15:49:40 thanks 15:49:44 it’s a legal backstop (as Gregg is saying) as well 15:50:29 +1 to Gregg 15:51:15 gregg: it's easier to make process than outcome, correct? 15:51:16 On the flip side, We were asked by the consumer side, to not make process. It is a make-outcome, I should say, because There's a long history of process. 15:51:38 On the flip side the flood of nuisance lawsuits would likely be reduced if it required discovery (work) to prove non-conformance. 15:52:22 Gregg: The point is, that are we making guidelines? that some companies cannot meet. Not, you know, that they're hard to meet, or whatever else. But they legally are prevented. 15:53:13 AC: We're not requiring anyone to make a conformance statement. 15:54:35 [for the record, the feedback from an e-commerce company was not from Amazon] 15:54:51 q- 15:54:57 it depends on the assertion. and the LOE (“burden”) 15:55:04 +1 to write what we can to reduce nuisance lawsuits 15:56:01 AC: the scoping bit, I find really interesting and important. 15:56:01 really interesting and important. 15:56:20 q+ 15:56:24 present- 15:56:32 ack scott 15:56:39 ... I don't think they should or have to apply to whole organisations. 15:56:51 where would a training assertion sit then? 15:57:31 SO: at Microsoft, there are some product teams that are basically teams within teams. 15:57:46 q+ 15:57:47 q+ what is an example of this theoretical assertion we are talking about? 15:57:53 q+ 15:57:58 Please note that for trainings, numbers of completion may not be tracked in some countries (like Germany). 15:58:03 q+ kirkwood 15:58:07 ack giacomo-petri 15:58:22 AC: guess my question then would be in order to make the assertion, would you know Would whoever's trying to make a claim be able to find that out? 15:59:04 q+ 15:59:04 Wouldn't it fall on you, the business, to require an ACR from the third party vendor and assess risk yourself? 15:59:04 GP: How do I know, is an assertion made by someone else outside the company valid for my current company? 15:59:04 Because I don't have control on the third party that is creating the website for me. 15:59:22 is “we only use WCAG 2.1 compliant software?” an assetion emample? 15:59:43 giacomo +1 15:59:56 I believe it's the company that requires it 16:00:00 GP: who is making the assertion? Is it the third party? 16:00:00 Is it the company that received the product from the third party? 16:00:07 q? 16:00:19 ack LoriO 16:00:30 AC: how is that different to now? So if they provide a product, are they providing WCAG conformance information about that product? 16:00:45 Scribe change? 16:01:02 Q+ on fluid teams 16:01:16 q+ chair hat off can we divide types of assertions into things that affect content and things that affect people 16:01:20 LO: having this assertion puts undue 16:01:20 pressure on a company. 16:01:41 q+ to say chair hat off can we divide types of assertions into things that affect content and things that affect people 16:01:45 I need to leave in 30 min, so I cannot offer to scribe :( 16:01:53 I can scribe 16:01:55 scribe+ 16:01:58 q- 16:02:01 present+ 16:02:08 ack GreggVan 16:02:22 s/I need to leave in 30 min, so I cannot offer to scribe :(// 16:02:37 s/I can scribe// 16:03:31 GreggVan: Giacomo and Lori have good points — we've run into instances where someone contracted someone else to deliver the website, once the company accepts it, it loses all ability to take action against their contractor. 16:03:33 GreggVan: If I were the lawyer, I wouldn't want to make assertions that happened in that company because I can make assertions about the provenance of what I have, check it for accessibility, but any processes that went into it at another company, I have no recourse against it. 16:03:55 “process assertion” “training assertion” “complinace assertion” 16:03:59 q+ 16:04:10 GreggVan: Making an assertion about anything is something companies will be able or not want to do, and that's a problem — you can't possibly pass something you cannot do 16:04:10 ack alastairc 16:04:10 alastairc, you wanted to comment on fluid teams 16:04:14 q+ 16:04:54 Health and safety, lifting stuff! 16:05:16 q+ 16:05:17 alastairc: Lori's comment about fluid teams — some organisations have to track certain trainings like security training, that's monitored even with contractors. There are things we have to track, regardless. We keep those constrained to things that people should be tracking anyway. 16:05:47 ack Rachael 16:05:47 Rachael, you wanted to say chair hat off can we divide types of assertions into things that affect content and things that affect people 16:05:49 alastairc: Some of these points come back to being careful about which ones to include and how they are scoped. Going back to scoping a conformance claim, it will help with that but keep an eye out on things where that won't work. 16:06:27 Rachael: There's a difference bet. assertions that affect an org or the people within an organisation like training, and assertions that are directly around things done to content then delivered like plain language review was conducted. 16:06:40 ack kirkwood 16:06:44 Rachael: I still hope to have assertions that affect content directly at a core level, but recognise the challenges there. 16:07:32 kirkwood: Concerned we're thinking of assertions a different way. You can make assertion that you meet the guideline, done training, a lot different ways — going above and beyond just meeting the guidelines is asserting a process. I think we should be specific about what these assertions are talking about. 16:08:09 alastairc: The assertions aren't on the topic of asserting that you're meeting something. If you look at an ACR, it's an assertion whether you've met guidelines or not on a certain scope. But what we're talking about is process-based, best example is Rachael's on a plain language review. 16:08:15 kirkwood: What about training? 16:08:21 +q 16:08:26 I think alastair that what you are referring to are training that everyone has to do (e.g. safety, harassement, security) ALL employees need these trainings so not a problem if they move in an out of tasks that surround accessible design or design. But we are talkng about task specific training that you only need for this specific task in the company - where people fly in and out without special training for the task. 16:08:42 alastairc: That has floated as an idea, along the lines of whether authors have training on alt text as an example. They were topic-specific. 16:08:53 ack GN 16:08:57 kirkwood: From a legal perspective, that's how we meet legal requirements by asserting. 16:09:10 Assert that you provide a way for user-generated content to include alternative text for images. Doesn't mean the alt IS provided or that it is any good, but may be a reasonable approach. 16:09:21 GN015: In some companies it might be possible to track who are involved in a specific product or had set of trainings, some countries aren't even allowed to track. 16:09:29 "we have a style guide (which includes accessibility)" is an assertion 16:09:41 s/GN015/GN 16:10:07 interesting point! 16:10:09 GN: It's not possible in countries like Germany, we may not push companies into being able to state something that could violate local laws. 16:10:48 alastairc: Some highlight training as part of internal document but not part of assertion. The only one that explicitly mentions is if author training is provided, it must provide guidance on these aspects of clear structure. Part of the clear structure review. 16:11:01 alastairc: It's not tracking whether people have done it or not, if you provide it, it should include this content. 16:11:02 q? 16:11:05 ack GreggVan 16:11:41 GreggVan: Any requirement that requires clear structure — there are no clear definitions — requiring people to be clear is interesting. 16:12:18 q+ to say training is not really any guarantee of a11y and maybe doesn't matter in the world of LLMs 16:12:20 q+ 16:12:24 q+ 16:12:44 GreggVan: We need to differentiate bet. mandatory trainings and training you have to have if you do design, and when you're doing electrical design, it has to be signed off by a professional engineer but nobody else needs to be trained, but making assertions about what teams do where there are no sign offs or required training to do them, companies slide people in and out of these things all the time and don't track the training. 16:12:48 Example of training: the Accessible Canada Regulations on Digital Accessibility states "Federal public sector organizations, large and medium-sized businesses must train their employees on digital accessibility by December 5, 2027." (cite: 16:12:48 https://www.canada.ca/en/employment-social-development/programs/accessible-canada/regulations-summary-act/amendment.html) 16:13:19 alastairc: Let's not ask for anything that would require people to track where training has taken place. 16:13:37 GreggVan: If you are saying that something was done, that people have to be trained what those words mean — all assertions require training. 16:13:57 q+ 16:13:59 ack Detlev 16:14:02 GreggVan: You have to explain, there's implied training. 16:14:43 Detlev: One of the critical questions we're discussing is whether assertions can be placed at the core level to meet some requirement, to make it more concrete we could take an example, say, large e-commerce company with lots of images that claim to have a process whenever uploading an image, there is a process we check whether it has alt text. 16:15:01 Detlev: If it doesn't have one, we generate one through AI, this might be a way of meeting the graphics part which is now 1.1.1 Alternative Text for Images 16:15:52 Detlev: Imagine many companies would like that, they'd have automated processes to do it. We can show we have the processes to do it. Would it be the point where you imagine that WCAG 3 would include assertions or these cases? 16:16:13 q+ to say I think that is a more of a method than an assertion. 16:16:22 alastairc: We use assertions to fill gaps where you can't have more outcome-based things. We're taking the approach of test the alt text, not what generates it, it is a testable thing. 16:17:00 Detlev: You have a human element checking whether the alt text is correct. You could say it can't be done, is that the point where an automated way generates it — cannot r eally be done on an outcome-based basis at scale can it? 16:17:12 q- 16:17:14 alastairc: We're tending not to use assertions, that would be more of WCAG-EM type of thing for compliance, not conformance. 16:17:17 ack joryc 16:17:17 joryc, you wanted to say training is not really any guarantee of a11y and maybe doesn't matter in the world of LLMs 16:17:44 cant unmute, wkip and come bacl 16:17:56 ack Charles 16:18:18 q+ 16:18:34 s/cant unmute, wkip and come bacl// 16:19:01 Personally disagree with the training bit, it's never there from the start which is the issue. 16:19:02 joryc: Detlev is bringing up an important point — I'm hesistant to add required training and proof of this — proces will change so quickly, training does not work, if we spent the last 10 years to train everyone and it didn't work, I'd rather have a solid review system than have every single person trained. Then you'd know exactly what things are going to happen. 16:19:45 joryc: Speaks more to the outcome, assert that they have systems in place, without having to demonstrate a particular process — it won't age well and even if it's a difficult process at different sizes of companies, it will have differing effects. 16:19:46 Could it be that assertions have a danger of a “get out of jail free” card? 16:19:56 alastairc: If you have an outcome, why would you need an assertion? 16:20:25 joryc: You can assert, if you have the outcome, but also assert that you have a process to generate this outcome. Assert that there is a process that leads to that outcome rather than explicitly trained. 16:20:35 ack Ben_Tillyer 16:20:46 +1 to Jory 16:21:48 From the state of the web right now not everyone will be able to make every assertion — the existence of WCAG 3 won't force your hand into making an assertion to get points towards the next level of conformance. Having assertions with these examples is great, it's good to have the framework there. 16:21:53 q+ 16:21:56 q- 16:21:56 q- 16:22:28 Ben_Tillyer: If legislators did want to assert things, it becomes their problem to balance that with other laws that exist in their market, we are not forcing anyone. I don't know whether we should be ensuring that all assertions could be answered without breaking laws. 16:22:33 ack julierawe 16:23:32 julierawe: There's at least one assertion that talks about, if training is provided — comments about training, if we just said that the organisation must have a style guide that takes the place of training, it is a tricky one. I think John Kirk mentioned that training has been used elsewhere in assertions but we have to figure out what this means. 16:24:01 julierawe: It is impossibel to make a testable requirement that's why we're in the zone of assertions, looks like we're l eaning towards reviews being okay and training is not okay — but not sure how much clarity I am getting from it. 16:24:12 q+ 16:24:14 alastairc: There's no training-centred assertion. IF you have training, THEN include this topic — that's the limit of it. 16:24:19 ack shadi 16:25:03 shadi: These comments are not f rom shadi or that organisation. 16:25:25 alastairc: Tech company slide — they are concerned about maintenance due to assertions. 16:25:53 alastairc: Broad assertions would likely be too generic to be truly helpful. That would support guidance on best practices, but not as normative requirements to disclose internal processes or policies. 16:26:25 alastairc: There's a misunderstanding that we're asking for any public internal policies — would just be doing a statement. 16:26:38 alastairc: Similar issues in terms of scoping that we discussed last feedback. 16:26:46 q+ 16:27:02 ack scott 16:27:04 alastairc: We can come up with guardrails for assertions on what we can include. Question about whether there are particular types of assertion that need to get more specific with more specific examples. 16:27:08 LenB has joined #ag 16:27:45 scott: Even through reading people's feedback, the examples in the presentation last time that made it unclear to my group when we were reviewing this what was required or not. I don't know how to talk to other people at Microsoft about what is being proposed. 16:28:10 scott: I think it's also being stated that it would be an optional thing, so I don't understand, could we have examples? That worked in the presentation before. 16:28:15 +1 to scott 16:28:23 SydneyColeman has joined #ag 16:28:27 +1 specific examples would be helpful 16:28:30 alastairc: Will try and come back to that. 16:28:33 +1 i do not know what anyone is talking about 16:28:38 [it's a lot of working gathering feedback at a large company] 16:28:40 Rachael: Chairs will do a reset and come back and restart this. 16:28:52 or how to represent this discussion to google in a tl;dr type way 16:29:04 q? 16:29:09 zakim, take up next item 16:29:09 agendum 3 -- Good enough" conversation https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1-124T8uEc9H6xAEB-ezcanXb34TNjemHcWWr7T5p1MU/edit?slide=id.p#slide=id.p -- taken up [from alastairc] 16:29:09 alastairc: Thank you for those who provided feedback — maybe we will come back to the group with another version of this to improve on that. 16:29:46 Rachael: This wasn't clear enough in the agenda, today's conversation is around when is AT or user agent or additional support — the tech stack support — good enough to step back? 16:30:04 Rachael: Guardrails for this conservation: one of the hopes of WCAG 3 is to be future proof. 16:30:24 Rachael: When we put it on the author, it's harder to get accessible sites back and we want to figure out ways forward, especially as technology speedily changes. 16:30:58 Rachael: Using technical infrastructure, in situations where the author can focus on avoiding/breaking that support, instead of actively providing support shifts the burden a little bit off the author. 16:31:45 rrsagent, make minutes 16:31:46 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2026/05/05-ag-minutes.html laura 16:31:52 Rachael: Question around the tech infrastructure itself — when is it good enough to allow us to step off? How much support is available, in a language set, the number of browsers or screen readers able to support, etc. the cost of it and technical complexity. 16:31:59 Rachael: Is it something to add as an extension in browser? Other cutoff points. 16:32:15 Rachael: This is not what we're talking about today — today is about the provision-specific quality measures. 16:32:43 Rachael: We have guidance around when the technical infrastructure is good enough but when is the actual support itself good enough for each provision? There's a new provision not in WCAG 2 that gives a baseline to explain this. 16:33:04 Rachael: A proposed baseline is to use what a human expert can do, the cutoff point. That's what the author is. 16:33:24 Rachael: There are other measures, presence or absence, error frequency, misrepresentation, quality checkpoints of different types. 16:34:11 Rachael: (slide 4) Captions — rapidly becoming true, we have a core requirement for captions being available for prerecorded content. 98-99% accuracy is being captioned with a trained human expert captioner but 95% accuracy for technical jargon. 16:34:22 Rachael: What would be the accuracy needed for automated captions? 16:34:35 q+ to say the accuracy percentage might depend on further conditions 16:34:43 are you sharing?? 16:34:51 (slide 5) Text detectable — if it is detectable, the requirement is all visible text has programmatically determinable equivalent. 16:35:41 Rachael: Assuming all of the text and images provide correct alternatives, can the requirements shift where the authors is not breaking things. 16:36:03 alastairc ah wasN#t aware of having several tabs now... 16:36:21 Rachael: (slide 6) 16:36:53 Rachael: (slide 7) In WCAG 2 when something was met by a tech stack, we didn't write it in WCAG 3. 16:37:04 Rachael: (Reading slide 7) 16:37:27 q? 16:37:32 ack GN 16:37:32 GN, you wanted to say the accuracy percentage might depend on further conditions 16:37:36 Rachael: Key question: is this a section we want to add and discussion around what that would look like 16:37:49 joryc has joined #ag 16:38:32 GN: The first example with automated caption, it might be more complex and depend on more conditions. People who rely on captions see a big difference in the need for a live meeting where they could immediately ask if something is not understand. Important information like news or TV, or enjoyable content, they'll need higher currency and higher quality. 16:39:01 q+ 16:39:03 GN: When it comes to technical jargon and non-technical jargon, its target is user-based. It needs to be accurate for non-technical users. Technical users might be able to guess the term. 16:39:16 GN: As for how far it helps, I'm open to learn. 16:39:21 ack Charles 16:39:56 Charles: I have the same question and concern as GN on accuracy point, but if context/percentage of accuracy is dependent on context, it gets more complicated. It could include ability to compare the caption to a transcript where one of those methods says one thing and other says other things. 16:40:32 Charles: The content vs. the context — example we have the concept of a financial obligation being made by an interaction — this could be captions on a medical procedure or financial transaction/instruction where the consequences of the accuracy are higher. 16:40:39 q? 16:41:15 q+ 16:41:16 Rachael: One thought is we could simply set it to the highest context. Simply say, the best a human can do is 98%, automated captionos 98%, that would be an acceptable place to make that replacement. 16:41:24 q+ on available vs quality level provisions 16:41:35 q+ 16:41:42 Rachael: Is the value of creating something like this at this time in the next 3-4 years — is that worthwhile? If it helps us refine the requirement text. Or is it something to postpone after we get the requirement text? 16:41:46 q+ to say that human accuracy to my experience is higher than 98% on prerecorded media 16:41:51 ack giacomo-petri 16:42:17 giacomo-petri: Is the way captions are provided relevant? If 98% is what we want to validate the captions requirement, is it relevant if it is provided automatically or by a human? 16:42:21 +1 to giacomo-petri 16:42:31 This is about the user need surely 16:42:39 q+ to answer giacomo 16:42:39 joryc has joined #ag 16:42:44 +1 o Giacomo 16:42:50 ack Rachael 16:42:50 Rachael, you wanted to answer giacomo 16:42:54 giacomo-petri: If I am accessing the video, I need it to be accurate, if it is above 98, it passes, and below, it fails. Not sure the distinction bet. automation/AI — what the user perceives must be accurate. 16:42:54 +1 to Giacomo 16:43:04 Strong +1 Giacomo 16:43:06 percent of accuracy would also vary by volume of content. 98% of 500 words is different than 98% of 50000 words. 16:43:26 Rachael: The use case is, for example, a video with no captions — I will put it on YouTube to provide automated captions. As author, I am required to fix them or create my own or can I simply say YouTube captions are enough and not required to do anything beyond that? 16:43:36 Rachael: The question is if we need these kinds of measures to make those decisions? 16:43:53 alastairc: If we had 2 methods, you apply captions or you rely on an automated tool, when can we say that that second method is good enough, is that right? 16:43:55 ack alastairc 16:43:55 alastairc, you wanted to comment on available vs quality level provisions 16:44:27 alastairc: Chair hat off, is this always going to be built in to base level 1? Depending on how captions are defined, does it need a quality metric? 16:44:30 ack shadi 16:45:09 q+ 16:45:27 shadi: If I understand correctly, there are criteria where quality measure would be very useful, the difficulty is to define the quality measure, e.g. caption quality — different types of methods, accuracy of words themselves, punctuation and grammar, identification of people, presentation/identification of speakers, is it accurate in the positioning? 16:45:29 This is a legal question the answer is in the definition in our definition of alt text. the legal issues is that the author needs to attest that it’s correct 16:45:58 q+ 16:45:59 shadi: There are different kinds of metrics, I think it will come down to how we define these metrics. I don't think it makes a difference if there's a quality threshold? 16:46:03 ack GN 16:46:03 GN, you wanted to say that human accuracy to my experience is higher than 98% on prerecorded media 16:46:07 shadi: Does it need to uphold a certain threshold? 16:47:12 ack julierawe 16:47:13 GN: Humans can reach accuracy 98% , I doubt it and would not be content with it. If we match it to written text that has 100 letters and 2 lines, and if a secretary does a typo every two lines, they would not pass an exam. Captions on prerecorded videos, and strive for an accuracy of 100%, I claim we reach 99%, and nothing lower, there would be too many errors. 16:47:23 alt text “ conveys the purpose and meaning of an image” 16:47:29 Jon_Avila has joined #ag 16:48:03 julierawe: Interesting conversation, noting that adding percentage accuracy — this shortname is Captions available, but we're not talking about available only, shifts to accuracy — is it available AND accurate? Additional thing that is not mentioned until you get to standards section. 16:48:12 julierawe: How many provisions would need to be adjusted in this way? 16:48:21 how can you be accurate about the purpose? of the image etc. that is up to the author. 16:48:43 q+ 16:48:59 What if we had an automatic caption option for user generated content that the site owner needs to meet - in that case some limited level could be required - but it would then be on the user who provided the content to provide captions that meet the full requirement. 16:49:00 q? 16:49:08 Rachael: That's a great point, it highlights a problem in this text — we don't have the word equivalent, and there are additional requirements that clarify, but the missing term equivalent gives it a gap — the process of thinking through this may have great value. 16:49:11 ack janina 16:49:12 q+ 16:49:21 alastairc: Definition of captions implies accuracy. 16:50:07 author purpose can be lost through ai 16:50:09 q- 16:50:10 janina: We're trying to think of AI in APA Research Questions Task Force — sometimes context can determine whether auto-generated captions/descriptions/content might just be sufficient because it's close enough and just there for entertainment or information, but in other circumstances, absolutely not acceptable esp legally held to or educational settings. 16:50:35 janina: We're probably not going to get it anytime soon from an AI, but we're going to be inundated. The comprehensive quality matters, as well as the context. 16:50:38 q+ on having a higher level regs for certain sectors 16:50:42 ack Jon_Avila 16:50:46 q+ 16:50:47 joryc has joined #ag 16:51:07 q+ to say human accuracy should probably be the standard so we don't force AI use, but AI will soon beat us, we should not have an opinion on how they were generated. 16:51:09 Jon_Avila: If we had an authoring tool requirement, require them, and platforms, to provide some level of captioning, but since it's the platform doing the captioning, we can't have the same requirement for content that the author supplies themselves. 16:51:23 Jon_Avila: We might need to have requirements that allow for different possible levels. 16:51:30 Jon_Avila: To make sure we're not preventing tools from being used. 16:51:35 ack alastairc 16:51:35 alastairc, you wanted to comment on having a higher level regs for certain sectors 16:51:38 There is a separate piece of work looking at authoring tools! 16:52:32 alastairc: Chair hat off, building on julierawe and Jon_Avila 's points, we have a fairly basic, base level 1 Captions are available and anything goes, then medium level, human accuracy, and higher level where we wouldn't say that this is necessarily for education/legal, but could be part of a higher level regulators could look into and say that it is necessary if it is legal rather than entertainment. 16:53:13 the PURPOSE needs to be conveyed (the author most accurately provide purpose) one should know if approved by author or not 16:53:21 alastairc: AI might soon beat us and we don't have an opinion on how captions were generated but we need a mechanism to hand off — if we have a human or method that adds captions and check accuracy, if we could have another method under the same requirements, if platform meets this level of quality, use it and don't worry about it. 16:53:23 ack LoriO 16:54:18 q+ 16:54:20 LoriO: Concern about the automatic captions, has to do with places where captions must be 100% correct, medical content — a doctor looking up in a medical journal and your caption is not quite right but if you go by what the caption is, you can cause harm and one of our tenets is do no harm. 16:54:30 LoriO: There are times when accuracy MUST be 100% or else fails. 16:54:39 Just noting that caption quality, in addition to accuracy, includes synchronicity and placement. FCC caption quality standards: https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-47/part-79/section-79.1#p-79.1(j)(2) 16:54:41 ack joryc 16:54:41 joryc, you wanted to say human accuracy should probably be the standard so we don't force AI use, but AI will soon beat us, we should not have an opinion on how they were 16:54:43 alastairc: Similar to what I said a while ago, to have a potentially higher level. 16:54:44 ... generated. 16:54:54 we should provide a framwork to let the reader/viewer know who the author of the captions are 16:55:12 joryc: We should get away from any preconception on how captions are created and just go with standard. The human standard is the way to go, don't want to force people to use AI, but by the time WCAG comes out, AI may be more accurate. 16:55:38 If you look at your medical record - i can almost guarantee it's not 100% accurate from your doctor's office already. So, 100% is not likely. 16:55:46 joryc: I don't think we need to talk about anything other than accuracy that needs to be reviewed, not that a human needs to look at it — need to be agnostic about what creates the captions and stick to accuracy — human standard is the right standard. 16:55:53 ack GreggVan 16:55:55 joryc: There are cases to have 100% accurate that is valid. 16:56:35 Verbal contracts are legally binding in the UK. 16:56:57 GreggVan: Getting into realm of making up problems, anything can be conveyed verbally and not in writing — can be conveying legal information, it would have been done in text. Medical information thought important could just be said to somebody and not provided to them in writing — high accuracy, none of them would be presented orally but in writing. 16:57:08 GreggVan: All the places we need high accuracy shouldn't rely on caption. 16:57:15 q? 16:57:20 q+ 16:57:29 ack giacomo-petri 16:58:04 wwe should have an attestation statement on caption by author ;) 16:58:16 q+ to say at least in financial implications I know examples for relying on the spoken words only 16:58:47 q+ to close 16:58:47 +1 16:58:52 ack Rachael 16:58:52 Rachael, you wanted to close 16:59:00 giacomo-petri: I don't think we shouldn't rely on automation, at the end it could be a platform that says their tool is 98% accurate in providing captions but at the very end you don't know until you test it. At the end if we have a method, it might be invalid and still needs to be tested. It could still fail regardless of the statement of the 16:59:01 platform. 16:59:16 -1 16:59:19 Should we continue this conversation? 16:59:22 Rachael: Should we continue this conversation or just put this into the methods process? 16:59:24 +1 to continue 16:59:31 +1 16:59:32 +1 to continue 16:59:33 +1 if its useful -1 if this should remain in subgroups 16:59:37 +1 16:59:40 +1 16:59:41 +1 (helpful to see examples from several groups) 16:59:46 +1 16:59:48 +1 16:59:48 +1 16:59:59 +1 17:00:00 +1 to continue, as I think we haven't come to an agreement yet (I'd put it into the methods, though) 17:00:01 +1 useful 17:00:07 0 17:00:23 present+ 17:00:33 giacomo-petri: I don't think we shouldn't rely on automation, at the end it could be a platform that says their tool is 98% accurate in providing captions but at the very end you don't know until you test it. At the end if we have a method, it might be invalid and still needs to be tested. It could still fail regardless of the statement of the platform. 17:00:33 s/shouldn't rely on/shouldn't add method specific for 17:00:38 Rachael: Should we continue this conversation or just put this into the methods process? 17:00:51 janina has left #ag 17:00:52 Charles has left #ag 17:01:14 present+ 17:01:21 zakim, end meeting 17:01:21 As of this point the attendees have been alastairc, janina, Laura_Carlson, Eloisa, Patrick_H_Lauke, erinevans, bbailey, Heather, ShawnT, AWK, Jennie_Delisi, filippo-zorzi, Charles, 17:01:24 ... GreggVan, sam-estoesta, Dirk, kevin, joryc, scott, kirkwood, Adam, julierawe, Rachael, BrianE, CClaire, Makoto_U, stevef, Anton, Detlev, giacomo-petri, Azlan, jtoles, 17:01:24 ... Francis_Storr, nat_tarnoff, Monica, LoriO, Ben_Tillyer, Jen_G, Gez, LauraM, shadi, jkatherman, kenneth, SydneyColeman, maryjom, GN 17:01:24 RRSAgent, please draft minutes v2 17:01:26 I have made the request to generate https://www.w3.org/2026/05/05-ag-minutes.html Zakim 17:01:32 Anton has left #ag 17:01:32 I am happy to have been of service, alastairc; please remember to excuse RRSAgent. Goodbye 17:01:32 jkatherman has left #ag 17:01:32 Zakim has left #ag 17:01:33 CClaire has left #ag 17:01:51 I will be away next week chairing the meetings of the Braille Authority of North America so I will not be able to attend. 19:40:12 kirkwood_ has joined #ag 19:57:05 kirkwood_ has joined #ag 23:22:49 srvjordi has joined #ag