[Blindtlk] REDBOX DISCRIMINATES AGAINST THE BLIND BY FAILING TO PROVIDE ACCESSIBLE SELF-SERVICE KIOSKS

Ray Foret Jr rforetjr at att.net
Mon Jan 16 01:21:24 UTC 2012


Well Mike, with respect, I would have on this matter to disagree with you.  However, we are you and I a generation back or so of the current one; and, back in our yonger days, you could actually still trust people.  Therefore, using sighted assistance would have been more the way to go with situations like Redbox.  However, with identity theft being what it has become nowadays; and, therefore, the greater sinsitivity of one's personal and finantial information needing to be rather more guarded than perhaps when you and I were growing up, I can well understand that folks nowadays are sinsibly reluctant to give over their finantial information to anybody else to enter for them.  Therefore, I would tend to support the action.


Sincerely,
The Constantly Barefooted Ray!!!

Now a very proud and happy Mac user!!!

Skype name:
barefootedray

Facebook:
facebook.com/ray.foretjr.1



On Jan 15, 2012, at 6:44 PM, Mike Freeman wrote:

> Bryan:
> 
> I tend to agree with you; it has never bothered me to use sighted assistance
> to work inaccessible devices. However, I suspect that even some who don't
> jump on the fanatical everything-must-be-accessible-to-everyone bandwagon
> might argue that they're paranoid when asked to enter financial information
> into such a machine and must use a sighted amanuensis. That never bothered
> me in that I figure if I use an untrustworthy person, I deserve what I get.
> But many others feel that at least accessibility to entering financial
> information is fast becoming an essential part of current life activity.
> They may be right.
> 
> Mike Freeman
> 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: blindtlk-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:blindtlk-bounces at nfbnet.org] On
> Behalf Of Bryan Schulz
> Sent: Sunday, January 15, 2012 4:13 PM
> To: Blind Talk Mailing List
> Subject: Re: [Blindtlk] REDBOX DISCRIMINATES AGAINST THE BLIND BY FAILING TO
> PROVIDE ACCESSIBLE SELF-SERVICE KIOSKS
> 
> hi,
> 
> so if someone had to take the guy to the location anyway, why is he so
> miffed about the machine?
> why not sue the film company for leaving out descriptions as well?
> people today are very sue happy.
> 
> Bryan Schulz
> 
>  ----- Original Message ----- 
>  From: David Andrews 
>  To: blindlaw at nfbnet.org 
>  Sent: Sunday, January 15, 2012 11:54 AM
>  Subject: [Blindtlk] REDBOX DISCRIMINATES AGAINST THE BLIND BY FAILING TO
> PROVIDE ACCESSIBLE SELF-SERVICE KIOSKS
> 
> 
> 
>> 
>> FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
> 
> 
> 
>> January 12, 2012
> 
> 
> 
>> CONTACTS: Bryan Bashin, CEO, Lighthouse for the 
>> Blind (415) 694-7346 Lisamaria Martinez, 
>> plaintiff (510) 289-2577 Michael Nunez of 
>> Disability Rights Advocates (510) 665-8644 Jay 
>> Koslofsky of Law Offices of Jay Koslofsky (510) 280-5627
> 
> 
> 
> 
>> REDBOX DISCRIMINATES AGAINST THE BLIND BY 
>> FAILING TO PROVIDE ACCESSIBLE SELF-SERVICE 
>> KIOSKS Oakland, CA – January 12, 20012 – Recent 
>> technological advances are sweeping the nattion, 
>> changing the way people buy products and 
>> services. Self-service kiosks with automated, 
>> touch-screen interfaces now allow people to 
>> bank, shop, and conduct a wide range of 
>> transactions independently, without the 
>> assistance of a clerk. This technology is fast 
>> becoming an integral part of our every day 
>> lives. Although these technologies can make our 
>> lives easier, Redbox, a video rental giant, has 
>> chosen to use self-service kiosks with 
>> touch-screen controls that exclude the blind 
>> from using its services.  Blind Californians 
>> cannot use touch-screen kiosks that offer only 
>> visually-based controls. A class action lawsuit 
>> filed today in the United States District Court 
>> for the Northern District of California 
>> challenges Redboxâ?Ts inaccessible kiosks. The 
>> lawsuit is the first of its kind in the country. 
>> The suit is brought by the Lighthouse for the 
>> Blind and Visually Impaired, as well as five 
>> blind individuals, on behalf of blind and 
>> visually impaired people throughout 
>> California.  Plaintiffs are represented by 
>> Disability Rights Advocates (â?oDRAâ?ˇ), a 
>> non-profit disability rights legal center 
>> headquartered in Berkeley, California that 
>> specializes in high-impact cases on behalf of 
>> people with disabilities. Plaintiffs are also 
>> represented by the Law Offices of Jay Koslofsky; 
>> Mr. Koslofsky is an experienced civil rights 
>> attorney. Redbox has a major share of the video 
>> rental market. Redbox DVD rentals account for 
>> approximately 34% of the DVD rental market 
>> nationwide. According to Redbox, almost 60 
>> million videos are rented from its kiosks 
>> nationally each month. Redbox kiosks can be 
>> found at thousands of businesses throughout 
>> California including Save Mart, which is a 
>> business that is also named as a defendant in 
>> the lawsuit. For generations, blind and visually 
>> impaired people have watched and enjoyed movies 
>> as an ordinary part of daily life. Blind people 
>> with some remaining vision may watch films on 
>> their own or with sighted friends and family who 
>> can describe the details and actions of a film. 
>> In addition, many blind people enjoy watching 
>> dialogue driven films. Plaintiff Lisamaria 
>> Martinez is a legally blind resident of Union 
>> City, California. â?ˇI love watching movies with 
>> my husband and son and would like to 
>> independently rent movies for my family at 
>> Redboxes,â?ˇ said Lisamaria Martinez. Plaintiff 
>> Joshua Saunders is a legally blind resident of 
>> El Cerrito, California who enjoys watching 
>> movies with friends and family. â?oIâ?Tm not 
>> asking for the world here but simply for the 
>> ability to rent DVDs from Redboxes just like 
>> everyone else can,â?ˇ said Joshua Saunders. 
>> Redboxâ?Ts inaccessible touch-screen kiosks shut 
>> out a large and growing community of blind 
>> Californians. It is estimated that 100,000 
>> Californians are legally blind and as the 
>> population continues to age, the number of 
>> adults with vision loss will increase. The 
>> technology exists to make self-service kiosks 
>> accessible to the blind. Accessible ATMs and 
>> iPhones make use of tactile controls and/or 
>> screen reading software that enables blind 
>> people to use these devices. â?oA lack of 
>> accessibility in newly emerging forms of 
>> commerce is a symptom of the overall growing 
>> technological divide that blind people 
>> experience when companies fail to build in 
>> accessible features at the onset,â?ˇ said Bryan 
>> Bashin, Executive Director/CEO of the Lighthouse 
>> for the Blind and Visually Impaired. 
>> â?oTechnology is a double edged sword. It has 
>> the power to enable millions, but it can disable 
>> many Americans far more than it enables them if 
>> accessibility is not built into technology at 
>> the beginning,â?ˇ said Jay Koslofsky, 
>> Plaintiffsâ?T attorney of the Law Offices of Jay 
>> Koslofsky. â?oRedbox is shutting out thousands 
>> of Californians from its services because it 
>> refuses to make its technology accessible to 
>> blind consumers,â?ˇ said Michael Nunez, 
>> Plaintiffsâ?T attorney of Disability Rights 
>> Advocates. About Lighthouse for the Blind and 
>> Visually Impaired The Lighthouse for the Blind 
>> and Visually Impaired, a non-profit corporation, 
>> is one of Californiaâ?Ts oldest organizations 
>> serving the blind and visually impaired 
>> community.  The Lighthouse is dedicated to 
>> aiding blind and visually impaired individuals 
>> in leading productive, enriching, and 
>> independent lives. About Disability Rights 
>> Advocates (DRA) Disability Rights Advocates is a 
>> non-profit legal center which, for nearly twenty 
>> years, has specialized in high-impact class 
>> action litigation on behalf of people with all 
>> types of disabilities.  DRA litigates nationally 
>> and has offices in New York City and Berkeley, 
>> California. About Law Offices of Jay Koslofsky 
>> Jay Koslofsky is an attorney in private practice 
>> with more than 30 years of experience. He 
>> specializes in civil rights cases and class action litigation. ###
> 
> 
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