The accessibility issue more people with disabilities should think about
Graphical representation of Blockchain identifying 5 uses: smart contract, digital voting, data storage, mining, and digital identity
Accessible Cryptocurrency and Blockchain
The problem people with disabilities have with currency is as old as currency itself. People with disabilities live in a world where:
Coins are heavy, easy to drop, and hard to pick up. In the US, the largest coin in regular circulation is a quarter, which doesn’t buy much these days.
Old paper bills frequently contain germs, which can impact people with compromised immune systems
New paper bills can be difficult to separate for people who lack fine motor skills.
Many countries have similar sizes and colors in their paper money, making it impossible for a person with significant vision loss to identify the correct bills to make a purchase without some sort of assistance. Even people with partial sight may have trouble distinguishing a $1 bill from a $10, especially if the bill is old or worn.
Unscrupulous people take advantage of people with vision loss courtesy of some of the physical currency deficiencies identified above. A lawsuit is currently pending against Walmart where because the self-checkout kiosks were inaccessible, the blind plaintiffs were forced to use a staffed checkout where it is alleged that the cashier stole money from the customers. I use the word alleged loosely, because the cashier was fired which is I think all you need to know for that story.
Cryptocurrency has numerous benefits over physical currency for all parties involved. For the payer and payee, there is instant settlement, less fraud, less reliance on centralized banks, and improved availability in remote areas where physical banks storing physical currency may not exist in convenient locations. For the government, there is less cost and hassle associated with producing, transporting, and securing physical currency.
If money were tracked in an entirely digital manner, compliance on tax reporting would improve, because it would be much harder to earn undeclared income or claim deductions that never existed. Academics at respected universities are suggesting the US would benefit from transitioning to a national digital currency. However, if digital wallets (the software holding the digital currency) are not accessible, that would effectively result in replacing one inaccessible currency format for another inaccessible currency format from the perspective of people with disabilities. And in this case, digital inaccessibility may be harder to overcome than physical currency inaccessibility.
Blockchain
Blockchain is the technology that enables the existence of cryptocurrency. However, blockchain is about much much more than Bitcoin, Etherium or any other of the numerous cryptocurrencies that have entered into the market in the past 10 years since it was invented. Some of the non currency related subjects that blockchain technology might be suited for include:
Supply chain — Integrating blockchain with supply chain management would make it much easier to validate product claims like ‘organic’ or ‘100 % US made’. Additionally, the use of blockchain would make it much easier to where bags of contaminated romaine were shipped to and who purchased them.
Health care — Blockchain could tell you who has touched your medical records, and when.
Reward/loyalty programs — How loyal are you to one company? Blockchain would allow companies like Starbucks to view ALL of the coffee purchases recorded to a digital wallet and reward people differently if they didn’t buy at Peet’s or Philz for a month.
Digital Voting — No more hassle of paper ballots or getting to a polling booth. Accessible polling place voting is usually a nightmare as many lawsuits have proven.
Copyright/royalties — Blockchain would enable copyright holders to automatically receive royalty payments down to a fraction of a cent every time someone listened to their song or read their book. This puts more money directly in the hands of content creators, since it eliminates the reliance on companies like BMI.
Tracking ownership — Anything with a title, license, or account number could be sequentially tracking using blockchain including real property, cars, weapons, or financial accounts. For houses, this could eliminate the reliance on expensive title searches.
All of the non-currency blockchain subjects identified above potentially come under Section 508 or the ADA.
Title transfer for property and voting would have some integration with a local, state, or federal government
Most healthcare services involve either physical facilities, accepts Medicare/Medicaid, or both
Title transfer for financial accounts would be related to a bank or brokerage, most of which have physical offices
Loyalty programs and supply chain would involve sales either online or in stores making them extension of public accommodations
While I am quite sure some a$$hole will litigate it, I don’t see any reason why the courts would come up for different rulings for accessibility requirements for blockchain than for buying burgers or groceries, taking a flight, or filing tax returns.
People with disabilities would be completely excluded from being able to use cryptocurrency or any innovations related to associated blockchain extensions without accessible user interfaces that allow them to search for blockchains and interpret the results. Even when the user interface is accessible, blockchain is largely a string of hexidecimal characters such as:
57309a5cf004fd4746ab508deb0093a5181fb93ead1fbf0b0ebf375b2e817fb6
Making this type of string user friendly currently requires the use of QR codes. Several years ago, David Berman wrote a brilliant article on how to make paper-based QR codes accessible to people who are blind. Extending that to QR codes that are entirely digital is not a significant leap from there. The 2016 Apple accessibility video clearly demonstrated that the technology exists to allow blind people to take pictures. It is work in these areas that will make blockchain not merely accessible but actually usable by people with disabilities.
Conclusion
Accessibility needs to be about more than just fixing inventions after they become public. The “reactive approach” to accessibility is expensive, causes delays, and the end result is usually an inferior experience. While the end result might be nominally WCAG compliant and accessible, it probably won’t be the optimal experience for people with disabilities.
True accessibility bakes in “how can we make this work better for people with disabilities?” when the design process begins. We have the opportunity to get this one right from the outset. When embarking on a paradigm shift that would benefit people with disabilities, make sure it actually works for people with disabilities. Let’s make it happen.