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Blog post thumbnail: Seollal Holiday Information Isn’t Visible to Everyone - One month into the Digital Inclusion Act, I review the accessibility of the Blue House Seollal(Korean Lunar New Year) holiday card news. Information trapped in images and missing alt text. A comparison with the Ministry of Health and Welfare shows the reality of accessibility on public websites. (https://www.codeslog.com/en/posts/seollal-gov-accessibility/)

Seollal Holiday Information Isn’t Visible to Everyone

This essay records what I have wrestled with on the ground about web accessibility, public web services, and the responsibilities of developers. Between law and technology, standards and reality, I try to answer the question: “Are we truly building for everyone?” Is today’s Seollal(Korean Lunar New Year) really providing equal information to everyone? Produced by: Nano Banana Ahead of the Seollal(Korean Lunar New Year) holiday, I browse the web to find helpful information. Seollal(Korean Lunar New Year) is a uniquely Korean holiday. As I visit site after site, the first thing I often encounter is an auto-rotating banner or card news. Around Seollal, these banners include important government notices like emergency information. ...

Published date: 2026-02-15 · Reading time: 4 min · Word count: 1626 words · Author: Isaac
Blog post thumbnail: Beyond Technology, Toward People – Understanding the Digital Inclusion Act – A people-centered summary of the Digital Inclusion Act (effective January 22), its purpose, differences from the Framework Act on Intelligent Informatization, kiosk usability obligations, and practical points such as impact assessment. (https://www.codeslog.com/en/posts/digital-inclusion-act/)

Beyond Technology, Toward People – Understanding the Digital Inclusion Act

This post is a record of grappling with web accessibility, public web services, and the responsibilities of developers from direct, hands-on experience. Between law, technology, standards, and reality, I try to answer the question: “Are we really building for everyone?” In the previous post, we reached this question: Even after meeting accessibility standards, why are so many people still excluded from digital services? The institutional answer to this question is the Digital Inclusion Act. ...

Published date: 2026-01-06 · Reading time: 9 min · Word count: 1761 words · Author: Isaac
Blog post thumbnail: Beyond Accessibility to Digital Inclusion - The Beginning of a New Era - Ahead of the Digital Inclusion Act (Jan 22), this piece shows how accessibility is expanding to digital inclusion through real cases and frames the questions we must ask for inclusive design. (https://www.codeslog.com/en/posts/digital-inclusion-new-era/)

Beyond Accessibility to Digital Inclusion - The Beginning of a New Era

This piece is a record of wrestling with web accessibility, public services, and a developer’s responsibility from the field. Between law and technology, between standards and reality, I try to answer: “Are we really building for everyone?” While working on web accessibility for years, I found myself repeatedly hearing a similar question: “We’re certified and passed the checklist. Isn’t accessibility done now?” When I first heard this question, I nodded briefly. Many public websites did meet WCAG 2.1 / KWCAG 2.2 standards, passed screen reader tests, and satisfied contrast requirements. ...