Comment mod parent up (Score 1) 151
nt
nt
Try 55,000 instead of 100,000.
Try the fact that most movies already have been captioned by the content owners and that Netflix is not displaying those captions, rather than having to caption from scratch.
Try 1.5 billion in revenues in 2011 versus substantially less than the $40M figure.
Whether or not something is an essential service is irrelevant under the ADA. The whole point is that you can't get out of discriminating against a group by stating that said group is not your target group. Contrary to your insinuation, the 9th Circuit judges are not stupid - in fact, they have a long history of coming down on the side of businesses.
As for the free services and interpreters, this is a strawman par excellence and not worth replying to. I'll just note two things here:
First, deaf and hard of hearing moviegoers pay for their tickets like everyone else. Second, supporting closed captioning in a movie theater is a ONE TIME cost of $2500 for the equipment. The rest is handled by the fact that digital projection systems already provide all the necessary functionality natively and that most movies are already captioned by the content owners.
And if a theater does not have a digital projection system yet, it is not required to provide closed captions.
So, let's cut the BS already.
Line 21 captions contain 2 characters per vertical blanking interval. That is plenty to maintain real-time text for the fastest speaker, even considering the overhead for positioning, attributes, and control characters.
Yes, they asked nicely many times.
Older DVDs do have textual captions. But HDMI has no provision for carrying closed caption data, and as a result these are not viewable on TVs that are connected to the player via HDMI (*). As a result, newer DVDs and BluRay discs uniformly use subtitles, instead, which are rendered bitmap images, rather than text.
(*) Recent FCC rules require that DVD and BluRay players must render the captions themselves before transmitting them via HDMI, starting in 2014, but this is tangential to the argument.
That is true for TV, but not for DVDs and BluRay discs. The latter could be handled via OCR, though. Unfortunately, DRM frequently stands in the way, unless we can gain an exemption to the DMCA from the Copyright Office. We filed for one, but this matter is still pending, and the Copyright Office told us that their ruling could go either way.
At the moment, they are screwed. However, there are some possibilities, based on the already existing closed captions. The biggest obstacle in moving forward on this problem is DRM, which is illegal to circumvent under the DMCA.
Larry Goldberg from NCAM says that it typically costs $400-$800 to caption a movie from scratch. If you add to that the fact that most Hollywood movies are already captioned by their content owners, it becomes the proverbial drop in the bucket.
The movie theaters tried to make the same argument and were slapped down by the 9th Circuit. The judges essentially told them: "So, does this mean that a courthouse does not have to provide a wheelchair accessible ramp, because it is targeted only at people without a mobility impairment?" The largest three movie theater chains eventually settled because of this. WIth digital projection systems, the cost to equip a theater with closed-caption equipment is less than $2500.
Only content that has been previously shown on TV with captions is covered on YouTube, by the 21st Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act. And unlike Netflix, Google has been very cooperative in complying with the captioning requirements under that law.
The FCC gained the authority to do so with the Telecommunications Act of 1996.
These are actually now required by the 21st Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act, starting in July. More specifically, the top four national networks have to provide a minimum of 50 hours of prime time video descriptions per quarter.
SMS to emergency services in Sweden is still alive. It has a registration requirement, though.
Location accuracy isn't good enough just to make a voice call and hope for the best without further communication. A case like this was recently documented by the Seattle authorities, where the location was off by four blocks, and the disabled victim was only saved by the fact that the parents were able to call 9-1-1 and give the precise location.
Most deaf and hard of hearing people do not use TTYs anymore. Many now use video and captioned telephone relay services, but 9-1-1 calls through relay services suck, to put it mildly. Call routing doesn't work well for these situations, and there are many documented cases of introducing 5-10 minute delays before the call is finally connected to the emergency responders. Compare that to sub-10 second response times for the majority of voice calls.
If you think the system is working, ask someone who's waiting for a prompt.