This Week in Accessibility: The latest in the multi-year Harvard/MIT closed captioning saga
Video window displaying beige cartoon female cartoon and
Video window displaying beige cartoon female cartoon and automatically-generated caption “amber online like in real life you’re on the hook” which makes no sense whatsoever as either an English sentence or an explanation for the graphic or what the graphic is supposed to be saying
In case you forgot what was going on (it’s been a while) here is the procedural history so far:
2015 — NAD files lawsuit for Harvard’s failure to provide close captioning
2016 — Court denied Harvard’s motion to stay/dismiss based on jurisdiction
2016 — NAD / Harvard enter into settlement talks
2016–2019 — Settlement talks fail, case spins back up
2019 — Court denied Harvard’s motion for judgment on the pleadings but did limit some discovery
The most recent ruling from March 28 contains the following decisions:
No Physical Nexus is required. For the second time, the court rejected Harvard’s argument that a physical nexus is required between the websites and a physical accommodation. This argument is used by defendants with inaccessible websites claiming that if there is no physical place for customers to go to, the ADA doesn’t apply because the business is not a public accommodation. Domino’s tried this one too. However, two things are true here:
This is a First Circuit case, and the First Circuit doesn’t require a physical nexus for cases alleging disability discrimination. That puts them in the minority of circuits, most circuits require a nexus, and a couple hasn’t expressed an opinion yet. This is a hot area of law that updates and refines frequently. Don’t trust Google to give you the right answer.
Even if for some reason the court changed its mind on its previous physical nexus decision, the court found that the Plaintiffs had sufficiently alleged such a nexus because the allegedly inaccessible videos could pertain to courses taught at the school.
Are the Defendants liable for third-party content? TBD. Depends on facts not yet in evidence. Factors the court stated it will consider include:
whether the university has control over how the content is displayed.
whether captioning the content would provide meaningful access.
would captioning fundamentally alter the nature of the service provided?
is the process or cost of adding captioning an undue burden to the defendants.
Harvard did get some CDA Immunity for a limited amount of Third Party Content. The only victory Harvard walked away with, this round. This will reduce the number of videos remaining at issue in the case. However, the court did NOT immediately exclude all content posted by students, individual faculty members, or scholars (which is what Harvard asked for). Again, the Court stated that there were not enough facts in the evidence.
Conclusion
My favorite professor in law school(Civil Procedure — love you Professor Putz) used to call the type of request that Harvard made in this round “Dear Judgie Wudgie” pleadings. He called them that because the defendants filing them were basically begging the judge to dismiss the suit because they didn’t want to deal with the cost/hassle/potential damaging information coming out of the discovery phase. Given how many times the judge said “We don’t have the facts to determine X,” it appears that the next step is discovery. Harvard appears to be out of options for making the suit go away in their favor.
Now Harvard gets to reap the benefits of not settling. Pending gun decisions include things like “Do we really want to try and make an undue burden analysis on the cost of captioning which gives the plaintiff the opening to try and drag in the value of our endowment fund?”
Maybe give settlement another try Harvard, and stop dragging out a case that you know you are going to lose in court and have already lost in the court of public opinion.