ZDNet UK


Skip to Main Content

ZDNet.co.uk - Winner of Best Business Website 2007
  1. Home
  2. News
  3. Blogs
  4. Reviews
  5. Prices
  6. Resources
  7. Community
  8. My ZDNet

 

ZDNet UK RSS Feeds


IT Jobs

Databases Toolkit

Lawyer warns that PDFs fail on accessibility

David Meyer ZDNet.co.uk

Published: 01 May 2007 16:29 BST

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

PDF documents on websites and intranets need to be accompanied by accessible HTML or text versions if they are to comply with disability legislation, a leading technology lawyer has claimed.

Struan Robertson, a senior associate at Pinsent Masons and the editor of IT law website Out-law.com, said that the accessibility of the PDF (portable document format)  was often forgotten, even by those companies that are striving to comply with the Disability Discrimination Act (DDA). The DDA, first introduced in 1995 but revised in 2005, requires organisations to make "reasonable adjustments" when catering to the requirements of people with special needs, such as visual impairment.

"The legal duty is to provide the information in a way that is accessible and usable," Robertson told ZDNet UK. "Many PDFs are not accessible and the solution is to provide accessible HTML in addition to PDFs, if you wish to use PDFs."

Robertson added that, although an organisation that has generally "addressed web accessibility" would be unlikely to be sued over its PDFs, a failure to provide an accessible alternative "might trigger a complaint".

Got questions?

Dell + mobility

Let us know what you'd like us to ask the Dell execs about their mobility strategy...

Read more +

"Many of us will dutifully warn the user that a PDF is going to be opened… but we stop short of offering an accessible document," he said, indicating that this meant that "many disabled users take 'PDF will open in a new window' to mean 'don't click here'".

Robertson was speaking on Tuesday at a seminar at London's Internet World event, alongside Hugh Huddy of the Royal National Institute for the Blind (RNIB), Jon Gooday of the disability charity AbilityNet and Fergus Brady of RiverDocs, manufacturer of an accessibility converter for online documents. The four panellists detailed issues that make PDFs inaccessible to the partially sighted or otherwise disabled.

Brady suggested that "last-minute changes" to documents were a major problem, in that "it is very easy to put that document up online and that is the reason why the majority of PDFs online are inaccessible".

Adobe, whose Acrobat software is most commonly used to create PDFs, had carried out "a lot of work" to make PDFs accessible, said Gooday. Nonetheless, he called the process of making such documents work with an audible screen reader "long and complicated", citing image labelling and document structure as two major pitfalls. Huddy said that the RNIB had tried to produce an accessible PDF of its annual report, but hit "glitches" with tables and slipping column headers — factors he said could render such an important document legally invalid.

"Most PDFs would not stand up to a basic accessibility check," said Huddy, who suggested that PDFs made from a "well-structured Word document" using Acrobat Pro might pass muster. He added that, in most cases, it would be "prudent to publish an alternative format, whether that is in HTML, [rich text format] or plain text, alongside [the PDF version of a document]".

Adobe had not responded to a request for comment at the time of writing.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly Print with Kyocera

Did you find this article useful?
15 out of 22 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

0 comments


Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:











Related Jobs

Technical Author

Job Description: The work of a technical author will vary between employers and sectors, but typical activities include: * keeping up to date with ...

Documention Controller - London E14

My client is seeking an immediately available Analyst to sort through their current Documents that their Support Team use to establish a single ...

Front End Developer XHTML, CSS, Javascript, W3C

Good understanding/awareness of Usability, Accessibility, Cross Browser issues. The successful candidate will need to: -Use information/interaction ...

Featured Talkback

How can it be true that doing the work of gathering and concentrating information about a person and placing it in a single database with multiple access routes; makes that information more secure?! I would suggest that most people would make the implicit assumption that that would make it *less* secure.

By: Andrew Meredith

Read full story:
Police chief criticises ID cards scheme