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Thread: font size reqs on legal disclaimer text

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From: Christi Evans
Date: Fri, Jul 22 2016 9:47AM
Subject: font size reqs on legal disclaimer text
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I'm working on legal text in both the global footer as well as
product/offer disclaimers.
Does it need to adhere to the same font size standards as regular body
text?
I've spent time researching this cannot find a solid answer. (I would
like to be able to just increase the text size regardless but there are too
many things at play until I figure this out.)

From: Chagnon | PubCom
Date: Fri, Jul 22 2016 10:17AM
Subject: Re: font size reqs on legal disclaimer text
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I don't think the legal community is exempt from the international guidelines, or has its own special set of guidelines either.
Although we all know how really "special" laywers are <grin>.

And if you can, please increase the point size of the disclaimers for us real people! Even a half point bigger helps.

--Bevi Chagnon

— — —
Bevi Chagnon | www.PubCom.com
Technologists, Consultants, Trainers, Designers, and Developers
for publishing & communication
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-----Original Message-----
From: WebAIM-Forum [mailto: = EMAIL ADDRESS REMOVED = ] On Behalf Of Christi Evans
Sent: Friday, July 22, 2016 11:48 AM
To: = EMAIL ADDRESS REMOVED =
Subject: [WebAIM] font size reqs on legal disclaimer text

I'm working on legal text in both the global footer as well as product/offer disclaimers.
Does it need to adhere to the same font size standards as regular body text?
I've spent time researching this cannot find a solid answer. (I would
like to be able to just increase the text size regardless but there are too many things at play until I figure this out.)

From: Karl Brown
Date: Mon, Jul 25 2016 1:58AM
Subject: Re: font size reqs on legal disclaimer text
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The closest thing to guidance I can find is the definition of larger scale
<https://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG20/#larger-scaledef> text, which suggests 14 if
bold or 18 for standard.

WCAG 2.0 1.4.4 says that text can be resized "without assistive technology
up to 200% without loss of content or functionality" so if the font size
can be changed by the user you should be fine.

As Bevi said though, having the font size be readable would be great. I
think the default in Chrome for the <small>
<https://www.w3.org/TR/html5/text-level-semantics.html#the-small-element>
element is about 0.8rem or roughly 13px. As that's the element that's used
for things like "disclaimers, caveats, legal restrictions or copyrights"
that might be the right approach and size to use?



On Fri, Jul 22, 2016 at 5:17 PM, Chagnon | PubCom < = EMAIL ADDRESS REMOVED = >
wrote:

> I don't think the legal community is exempt from the international
> guidelines, or has its own special set of guidelines either.
> Although we all know how really "special" laywers are <grin>.
>
> And if you can, please increase the point size of the disclaimers for us
> real people! Even a half point bigger helps.
>
> --Bevi Chagnon
>
> — — —
> Bevi Chagnon | www.PubCom.com
> Technologists, Consultants, Trainers, Designers, and Developers
> for publishing & communication
> | Acrobat PDF | Print | EPUBS | Sec. 508 Accessibility |
> — — —
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: WebAIM-Forum [mailto: = EMAIL ADDRESS REMOVED = ] On
> Behalf Of Christi Evans
> Sent: Friday, July 22, 2016 11:48 AM
> To: = EMAIL ADDRESS REMOVED =
> Subject: [WebAIM] font size reqs on legal disclaimer text
>
> I'm working on legal text in both the global footer as well as
> product/offer disclaimers.
> Does it need to adhere to the same font size standards as regular body
> text?
> I've spent time researching this cannot find a solid answer. (I would
> like to be able to just increase the text size regardless but there are
> too many things at play until I figure this out.)
>
> > > > >



--
Karl Brown
Twitter: @kbdevelops
Skype: kbdevelopment

Professional Certificate Web Accessibility Compliance (Distinction),
University of South Australia, 2015