The Accessibility Guidelines Working Group (AGWG) has published
Accessibility Conformance Testing (ACT) Rules Format 1.0 as a W3C Recommendation. This
standard helps developers of automated testing tools and manual testing methodologies to write, share, and implement test rules.
The test rules contribute to consistent testing for accessibility standards compliance.
ACT is introduced in the ACT Overview. For more information and examples of organizations already using ACT,
see the blog post: Calibrate Your Accessibility Evaluation With ACT.
英語に翻訳された結果
W3C is an abbreviation for “World Wide Web Consortium” and is the name of a non-profit organization that standardizes Web technologies.
W3C was founded in 1994 by Tim Berners-Lee, standardizing the technology used on the Web,
and continuing its activities with the goal of smoother development and quality improvement.
Currently, many specifications such as HTML, XHTML, CSS, DOM (Document Object Model) and XML (Extensible Markup Language) are published,
and it is so large that nearly 400 organizations, mainly IT-related companies, join as members. Growing into a group.
W3C has now established branch offices around the world, and since September 1996,
Keio University SFC Research Institute in Japan has been responsible for activities in the Japan branch and East Asia.
The SFC Institute, together with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (MIT CSAIL),
the European Information Processing Mathematics Research Consortium (ERCIM), headquartered in France,
and Beihang University in China, W3C It plays a central role in management.