DigitalA11Y - Wednesday, April 2, 2025 at 8:36 AM
10 Hilarious (but Sadly Real) Stereotypes About Digital Accessibility
The world of digital accessibility is full of myths, misconceptions, and downright ridiculous stereotypes. If you work in this space, you’ve probably heard these before. If not, brace yourself—because reality is wilder than fiction.
1. “Blind People Don’t Use the Internet”
Oh yes, because blind people just sit in the dark waiting for technology to catch up, right? News flash: Blind users do browse the web—using screen readers, braille displays, and other assistive tech. In fact, they’re probably navigating sites faster than sighted folks (because tabbing through a page is way quicker than clicking random buttons).
Real Example:
A big e-commerce brand got sued because their checkout process wasn’t accessible. Turns out, blind users were trying to shop—just like everyone else.
2. “Just Add an Accessibility Widget, and Boom! You’re Compliant”
“Let’s slap on this AI-powered magical overlay. Problem solved!”
No. Just no. Accessibility overlays are the digital equivalent of putting a bandaid on a broken arm. They don’t fix the actual code, and they often make things worse. Imagine a restaurant putting a giant neon sign saying “WHEELCHAIR USERS WELCOME” but then making customers crawl through a window to enter.
Real Example:
A company installed an overlay and patted themselves on the back—until disabled users started tweeting about how their website was now completely unusable.
3. “Accessibility Only Helps a Small Group of People”
“Why spend money on accessibility? It’s just for a few users, right?”
Yep, just a few users… like billions of people who have disabilities, older adults struggling with small fonts, people using voice control, and anyone who has ever tried to use a phone in bright sunlight. Accessibility benefits everyone—even the guy rage-clicking “Forgot Password” because he can’t see the tiny link.
Real Example:
A company increased its contrast and font size for accessibility—suddenly, conversion rates went up because everyone found the site easier to read.
4. “Captions Are Only for Deaf People”
“Why add captions? Can’t deaf users just, like, turn up the volume?”
First of all, NO. Second, captions help everyone—like commuters watching videos on mute, people in noisy cafes, or that one guy pretending to work during a Zoom meeting.
Real Example:
A media company added captions to their videos. Engagement skyrocketed because people could actually understand what was being said—even when watching secretly during work hours.
5. “Accessibility Is Too Expensive”
“We can’t afford accessibility right now. Maybe later.”
Ah, yes. Because fixing an inaccessible website after getting sued is so much cheaper than just doing it right from the start. It’s like saying, “We can’t afford seatbelts in our cars. Let’s wait until we crash.”
Real Example:
One company ignored accessibility… until they got hit with a lawsuit and had to spend 10 times more fixing it under legal pressure. Fun times!
6. “Accessibility Means Just Adding ALT Text”
“We wrote ALT text for our images. We’re fully accessible now!”
Oh, sure. Because accessibility is just about describing your stock photos in great detail. “A businessperson smiling in an office with inspirational lighting.” Meanwhile, your website has keyboard traps, no heading structure, and a color contrast that makes people squint like they’re staring at the sun.
Real Example:
A company proudly declared their site accessible because they added ALT text—except they labeled every single image as “image.jpg.” Great job, guys.
7. “People with Disabilities Have Special Websites for That”
“Do disabled people even use our website? Don’t they have their own internet?”
Oh yes, because there’s a secret parallel internet just for disabled users, where websites magically work, checkout flows don’t break, and CAPTCHAs don’t exist. Spoiler alert: No, there isn’t. People with disabilities use the same internet as everyone else—and they expect it to be functional.
Real Example:
A government website assumed blind users wouldn’t visit. Turns out, they had to—because that’s where essential services were. Lawsuits followed.
8. “Just Hire a Disabled Person to Approve It”
“We have a blind guy in our office. He said it’s fine!”
Oh, so one disabled person represents all disabled people? Accessibility isn’t a one-size-fits-all situation. A screen reader user might have no issues, but a person with motor impairments might find your website impossible to use. You need real usability testing—not a single “thumbs up” from Dave in accounting.
Real Example:
A company relied on one disabled employee’s feedback—then got flooded with complaints from other disabled users. Turns out, Dave didn’t use a screen reader. Oops.
9. “If We Make It Accessible, It’ll Look Ugly”
“We don’t want our design to suffer just because of accessibility.”
Because good design is only for people with perfect vision and motor control, right? Accessibility doesn’t mean boring—it means better. Clean layouts, high contrast, and readable fonts actually make things look better, not worse.
Real Example:
A fashion brand refused to adjust their website for contrast and readability. Their customers complained—because even non-disabled people couldn’t read the tiny, low-contrast text. Sales dropped. Oof.
10. “Nobody Cares About Accessibility Until They Need It”
“Accessibility isn’t a priority for us right now.”
Oh, so you’ll start caring only when a lawsuit lands in your inbox? Or when a key stakeholder realizes their aging parents can’t use your site? Accessibility isn’t a trendy feature—it’s about making sure everyone can use your product.
Real Example:
A tech startup ignored accessibility. Then their CEO broke his wrist and suddenly cared about keyboard navigation. Amazing how fast priorities change.
Final Takeaway
Digital accessibility isn’t some mythical bonus feature—it’s essential. The web should be usable for everyone, and these stereotypes? They’re holding progress back.
So the next time someone tells you “Accessibility isn’t that important,” just ask them:
“Now, go forth and make the web a better place! And if anyone tells you “But blind people don’t use the internet,” just respond:
“Oh, so they just… teleport their food deliveries? Interesting.”
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