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95 Ind. L.J. 591 (2020)
Internet Architecture and Disability

handle is hein.journals/indana95 and id is 606 raw text is: 








Internet Architecture and Disability


                                 BLAKE   E. REID*

 The Internet is essential for education, employment, information, and cultural and
 democratic participation. For tens of millions of people  with disabilities in the
 United States, barriers to accessing the Internet including the visual presentation
 of information to people who are blind or visually impaired, the aural presentation
 of information to people who are deaf  or hard of hearing, and the persistence of
 Internet technology, interfaces, and content without regard to prohibitive cognitive
 load for people with cognitive and intellectual disabilities-collectively pose one of
 the most significant civil rights issues ofthe information age. Yet disability law lacks
 a comprehensive theoretical approach for fully facilitating Internet accessibility. The
 prevailing doctrinal approach to Internet accessibility seeks to treat websites as
 metaphorical  places subject to Title III of the Americans with Disabilities Act
 (ADA), which requires places of public accommodations  to be accessible to people
 with disabilities. While this place-centric approach to Title III has succeeded to a
 significant degree in making websites accessible over the last two decades, large
 swaths of the Internet  more  broadly construed  to include Internet technologies
 beyond  websites  remain  inaccessible to  millions of people  with a  variety of
 disabilities.
   As  limitations of a place-based approach  to  Title III become clearer, a new
frameworkfor disability  law  is needed in an increasingly intermediated Internet.
Leveraging  the Internet-law literature on perspectives, this article recognizes the
place-centric approach  to Title III as normatively and doctrinally internal, in the
terminology  of Internet-law scholars. It offers a framework for supplementing this
internal  approach  with  an  external approach   that  contemplates  the layered
architecture of the Internet, including its constituent content, web and non-web
applications, access networks  operated by Internet service providers, and devices
and   the role  of disability and  other  bodies  of  law, particularly including





     *  Associate Clinical Professor, Colorado  Law,  Director, Samuelson-Glushko
Technology  Law &  Policy Clinic (TLPC), and Faculty Director, Silicon Flatirons Center.
Affiliations listed for identification purposes only; this article reflects only my personal
opinions and not necessarily those of my affiliated institutions or any of the TLPC's clients.
Thanks to Jose Moncada, Grayson Wells, and their colleagues at the Indiana Law Journal for
their tireless editing work and helpful contributions, to Annemarie Bridy, Margot Kaminski,
Paul Ohm,  Sam Bagenstos, Jack Bernard, Brad Bernthal, Peter Blanck, Anna Spain Bradley,
Chris Buccafusco, Sarah Burstein, Anupam Chander, Julie Cohen, Rick Collins, Rebecca
Crootof, Doron Dorfman, Bryan Frye, Kristelia Garcia, Amy Griffin, Lakshman Guruswamy,
Jennifer Hendricks, Meg Leta Jones, Daphne Keller, Craig Konnoth, Sarah Krakoff, Ben
Levin, Jack Lerner, Clayton Lewis, Robin Malloy, Susan Nevelow Mart, Helen Norton, Aaron
Perzanowski, Sloan Speck, Claude Stout, Karen Peltz Strauss, Harry Surden, Jason Schultz,
Scott Skinner-Thompson, Amanda Levendowski, Christian Vogler, and Michael Waterstone
for helpful feedback and conversations on this article, to Jim Anaya, Kristen Carpenter, Jane
Thompson,  Karen  Selden, and Derek Kiernan-Johnson for helpful feedback on earlier
iterations of this article, to Luke Ewing for able research assistance, to Sophie Galleher for
helpful edits, and to Sara and Jonas Reid for their support.

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