Web content means the information and sensory experience to be communicated to the user by means of a user agent, including code or markup that defines the content’s structure, presentation, and interactions. Examples of web content include text, images, sounds, videos, controls, animations, and conventional electronic documents.
Conventional electronic documents means web content or content in mobile apps that is in the following electronic file formats: portable document formats (“PDF”), word processor file formats, presentation file formats, and spreadsheet file formats.
Reference: Final rule revising the regulation implementing title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act. Nondiscrimination on the Basis of Disability; Accessibility of Web Information and Services of State and Local Government Entities (PDF)
Newsletters and email content (headings, contrast, images w/ alt text, signatures)
Documents and files (PDFs, word processing docs, presentations, spreadsheets)
Web content and sites (public and internal)
Social Media (alt text, captions, camel case, emojis)
Interactive elements (forms, quizzes, surveys, polls)
Videos and multimedia (with captions/transcripts)
Live events and webinars (live captions, interpreters)
Software/internal systems and third-party content (intranet, CRMs, vendor tools)
Legacy/archived content and historical media (No need for remediation for archived content.)