User Agent Accessibility Guidelines Working Group, Revised
- Mission
- Scope
- Deliverables
- Dependencies
- Duration
- Success
- Communication
- Confidentiality
- Voting
- Participation
Information about how to join the UAWG is available on the Web.
Note. Although this charter is available publicly, some of the links in this document refer to resources that require W3C Member access. This charter is written in accordance with section 4.2.2 of the W3C Process Document.
1. Mission
The mission of the User Agent Accessibility Guidelines Working Group (UAWG) is to produce guidelines for the development of accessible user agents: software that retrieves and renders Web content, including text, graphics, sounds, video, images, etc. In particular, the UAWG seeks to make the User Agent Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 a W3C Recommendation, and to collect initial requirements for a subsequent version of User Agent Accessibility Guidelines.
This mission is complementary to the work of other Web Accessibility Initiative(WAI) groups within the WAI Technical Activity and the WAI International Program Office Activity. The UAWG is part of the WAI Technical Activity.
The UAWG was first chartered in December 1997 (December 1997 charter). The UAWG was rechartered on 5 November 1999 (November 1999 charter, expired 30 April 2000), and then rechartered 5 May 2000(expired October 2001).
2. Scope
The scope of the UAWG's work under this charter is to:
- Make the User Agent Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 a W3C Recommendation;
- Develop techniques for implementing the UAAG 1.0 in a range of different types of user agents;
- Track related work in other Working Groups, commenting on and integrating it as appropriate;
- Evaluate user agents for conformance to the guidelines;
- Track and promote implementation of UAAG 1.0 requirements during and after Candidate Recommendation;
- Collect initial requirements for a subsequent version of UAAG.
3. Deliverables
The UAWG has been working on the User Agent Accessibility Guidelines (UAAG) 1.0 since its original charter. UAAG 1.0 entered Candidate Recommendation for the second time in September 2001. The Working Group will continue to work on the following deliverables:
- The UAAG 1.0, which focuses on the accessibility of mainstream graphical user agents intended for use in conjunction with assistive technologies. The UAAG 1.0 must address cross-disability considerations, be consensus-based, technically sound, and reflect the most current technology. The UAWG intends for the (UAAG) 1.0 to become a W3C Recommendation;
- Techniques for (UAAG) 1.0, which provides implementation details for satisfying the requirements of the Guidelines. The UAWG intends for the Techniques document to become a W3C Note at the same time the Guidelines advances to Recommendation status;
- An ongoing assessment of implementation of the UAAG1.0;
- A report suggesting the next round of deliverables and direction for the next charter. For instance: a requirements document for additional deliverables, such improved guidance on orientation and navigation features, guidelines for mobile and kiosk technologies, guidelines for accessible scripts and plug-ins, increased support for XML technologies and the W3C DOM, sample code, improved techniques documents, etc.;
- Minutes of UAWG meetings.
4. Dependencies
The UAWG should ensure consistency where appropriate between the UAAG 1.0 and other WAI deliverables, including the "Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0", the "Authoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines 1.0," and the "XML Accessibility Guidelines."
WAI Working Groups (e.g., Web Content Accessibility Guidelines Working Group, Authoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines Working Group, and Education and Outreach Working Group) often interact directly. The WAI Coordination Group can help facilitate those discussions.
The Protocols and Formats Working Group (PFWG public page also available) is the primary conduit for describing and resolving dependencies between WAI groups and other W3C Working Groups. Consequently, requirements for dependencies between the UAWG and other W3C Working Group's are primarily channeled through the Protocols and Formats Working Group.
The UAWG will interact with the following non-WAI W3C Working Groups via the Protocols and Formats Working Group:
- CSS/FP WG (CSS public page)-- UAWG will provide input on accessibility requirements in CSS;
- DOM WG (DOM public page)-- UAWG will provide input on accessibility requirements for DOM;
- HTML WG (HTML public page)-- UAWG will provide input on potential improvements to XHTML accessibility features.
- SVG WG (SVG public page) -- UAWG will provide input on accessibility features of an SVG display user agent.
- Mobile Access IG -- UAWG and Mobile Access IG will coordinate to ensure consistent approaches on guidelines development and on CC/PP(Composite Capability Preferences Profile);
- SYMM WG (SYMM public page)-- UAWG will provide input on accessibility requirements in SMIL;
- Voice Browsing WG (Voice Browser public page) -- UAWG will provide input on accessibility requirements in Voice Browsing.
5. Duration
The current charter has a duration until 1 May 2003. The assumption is that UAAG 1.0 will proceed to Recommendation in the fall of 2002, followed by post-Recommendation support.
6. Success
The success criteria for the UAWG are:
- Production of deliverables, including advancement of UAAG 1.0 to a W3C Recommendation.
- Implementations of UAAG 1.0 as well as commitments to implement.
7. Communication
The Working Group will make use of the following communication mechanisms:
- A public mailing list: w3c-wai-ua list;
- A public home page;
- Remote meetings every week or every other week;
- Approximately three face-to-face meetings per year;
- Coordination with other WAI groups, facilitated by the WAI Coordination Group (WAI CG);
- Communication with other W3C groups through the Chairs mailing list (Member-only), through the Protocols and Formats Working Group, and through WAI Domain liaison to the Hypertext Coordination Group(Member-only);
- Communication with the public through Working Draft releases and Education and Outreach Working Groupwork.
8. Confidentiality
The Working Groups proceedings, mailing list archives, charter, and deliverables will all be public.
9. Voting
This charter has been written in accordance withSection 4.1.2: W3C Process for consensus and votes of the 19 July 2001 Process Document and includes no voting procedures beyond what the Process Document requires.
10. Participation
The UAWG welcomes participation from W3C Member organizations, and also invites experts from disability organizations, accessibility researchers, assistive technology developers, government organizations, and others interested in promoting accessibility in Web-based user agents.
10.1 Member and Invited Expert participation
Participants are expected to observe the requirements of theSection 4.2.4 of the Process Document ("Good Standing in a Working Group"). The following is an excerpt from that section:
Participation on an ongoing basis implies a serious commitment to the Working Group charter, including:
- attending most meetings of the Working Group.
- providing deliverables or drafts of deliverables in a timely fashion.
- being familiar with the relevant documents of the Working Group, including minutes of past meetings.
- following discussions on relevant mailing list(s).
For this Working Group, the following commitment is expected:
- Minimum 4 hours per week, including meeting time and reading/responding to mailing list;
- Remain current on the w3c-wai-ua mailing list (mailing list archive) and respond in a timely manner to postings on mailing list;
- Participate in remote meetings or send regrets to Chair;
- Participate in face-to-face meetings or send regrets to the Chair;
- Remain aware of related work in other WAI Working Groups.
10.2 W3C Team participation
- 15% Ian Jacobs -- Guidelines editor and transitional Team contact.
- 40% Matt May -- New Team contact and editor.
- 5% Judy Brewer -- WAI Domain Lead, coordination with other W3C groups, and with W3C management.
10.3 Intellectual Property Rights (IPR)
W3C promotes an open working environment. Whenever possible, technical decisions should be made unencumbered by intellectual property right (IPR) claims.
This is a Royalty Free Working Group, as described in the 24 January 2002 version of W3C's Current Patent Practice.
Working Group participants disclose patent claims by sending email to patent-issues@w3.org; please see Current Patent Practice for more information about disclosures.
If and when W3C institutes a more formal patent policy, the UAWG charter will be revised, following the recommendations of the Patent Policy Working Group, in a manner consistent with the IPR goals of the current charter: that the UAWG produce deliverables that ought to be implementable royalty-free.
10.2 Joining the Working Group
Information about how to join the Working Group is available on the Web.
Jon Gunderson, Division of Rehabilitation - Education Services University of Illinois at Urbana/Champaign, Working Group Chair (jongund@uiuc.edu)
Matt May, Team Contact (mcmay@w3.org)
Judy Brewer, WAI Domain Lead (jbrewer@w3.org)
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