World Wide Web code NFT sells for $5.4 million at auction dailymail.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dailymail.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Are you prepared to address the evolving needs of disabled shareholders?
No one in IR sets out to alienate or insult shareholders. But that’s what can happen when investor communications fall short of accessibility standards and companies compound the problem in their dealings with shareholders who have disabilities.
Jill Houghton, president and CEO of Disability:IN, tells of one case that illustrates how quickly a lack of awareness can damage or terminate an investor relationship. It began with what should have been a straightforward accessibility request by a shareholder with a hearing impairment. The company, unable to comply, suggested the shareholder – a corporate executive – use her
Reasons You Need To Visit The Lodge At St. Edward State Park travelawaits.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from travelawaits.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
“When we first were told that we needed to make our collections accessible, I asked … ‘How are we even going to do it?’” said Emily D. Harrison, digital projects specialist at Mississippi State University (MSU) Libraries. The project seemed overwhelming, and she didn’t know where to start.
Harrison and Lauren Geiger, metadata librarian at MSU Libraries, shared their experiences in improving accessibility in the university’s digital archives and special collections at the on-demand session “Accessible, Not Just Discoverable: Ensuring Accessibility in Digital Collections,” part of the American Library Association’s 2021 Annual Conference and Exhibition Virtual.
Users encounter the four principles of accessibility in layers like an onion, Geiger said. When evaluating accessibility, consider whether items are:
It’ll all be different now that the U.K.’s antitrust authority has come to the rescue.
At least, that’s what James Rosewell, CEO and co-founder of 51Degrees, a small ad tech fish in a Google-dominated pond, hopes will happen now that the country’s competition oversight agency is expected to play a role in the process Google has guided in developing cookieless tracking and targeting tech.
The Worldwide Web Consortium an international web standards body also known as the W3C is hosting the Privacy Sandbox initiative to develop methods for tracking, ad targeting and measurement to replace third-party cookie-based approaches. But Google is driving the initiative, which it developed in connection to its now-delayedplans to disable third-party cookies in its much-used Chrome browser. And ad tech providers like Rosewell feel like Google’s involvement has unfairly tipped the Privacy Sandbox process in the digital ad giant’s control.