United States | So sue me

Lawsuits over disabled Americans’ access to websites have surged

They aren’t making sites easier to use, but some people are profiting

A wooden gavel surrounded by website symbols and icons
Image: Tomasz Woźniakowski
|NEW YORK

Bill Dengler is trying to become an Italian citizen. He has all the documents ready to go. But Mr Dengler, an American software engineer who was born fully blind, cannot make an appointment with the Italian consulate in San Francisco. Its booking system uses a colour-based calendar, which is not legible to his screen reader, a device that delivers a website’s content in audio form. And, perhaps because slots fill rapidly, rules prohibit him from hiring someone to make the appointment on his behalf.

This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “So sue me”

From the September 2nd 2023 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from United States

The US Army needs inferior, cheaper drones to compete

It seems obvious. So what is stopping it from happening?

Trump has faced down Republican dissidents in Congress

After some drama he gets his man for speaker of the House. That was the easy part



Russ Vought: Donald Trump’s holy warrior

The Christian nationalist and budget wonk who wants to crush the “deep state”

Jimmy Carter reshaped his home town

What the 39th president means to Plains, Georgia

The Bourbon Street attack was part of a new pattern

Why some experts fear a resurrection of Islamic State