The debate on PDF continues

Yesterday at Internet World our PDF expert Hugh Huddy spoke on a panel about “PDF Documents & Web Accessibility – What you need to know if you have PDF on your website”. Joining him on the panel was Struan Robertson, a senior associate at Pinsent Masons and the editor of IT law Web site Out-law.com, Jon Gooday from AbilityNet and Fergus Brady from Riverdocs.

The whole issue around PDF and accessibility has been running for years and we have always asked that people create accessible PDF’s according to the Access Adobe guidelines, avoid putting key information or scanned images of text in PDF, provide accessible alternatives where possible (in HTML, Word or text) as well as provide links to the Adobe Online PDF conversion tool on web pages where PDF’s can be downloaded from. In this press release Hugh clarifies what should be done when using PDF’s while Straun discusses how inaccessible PDF could fall foul of the law under the 2005 Disability Discrimination Act (DDA):

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

This clearly underpins the necessity for producing accessible PDF’s in all circumstances as described by Access Adobe and if this isn’t possible looking at producing an accessible alternative.

Read the whole article PDFs fail on accessibility, says lawyer on Out-Law.com.