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The Redesigned Cheong Wa Dae Website — But What About Accessibility? thumbnail

The Redesigned Cheong Wa Dae Website — But What About Accessibility?

This post is part of an ongoing effort to monitor public websites as a web accessibility professional. It is written with the goal of improving information accessibility and advancing technology — not as a political statement. I only recently found out the Cheong Wa Dae website had been redesigned. Life gets busy, and I was a bit late to the news — but as soon as I heard, I was curious enough to check it out. ...

Published date: 2026-04-21 · Reading time: 35 min · Word count: 7397 words · Author: Isaac
Seollal Holiday Information Isn’t Visible to Everyone thumbnail

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: 1708 words · Author: Isaac
Beyond Technology, Toward People – Understanding the Digital Inclusion Act thumbnail

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: 1742 words · Author: Isaac
Beyond Accessibility to Digital Inclusion - The Beginning of a New Era thumbnail

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. ...

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