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IMG alt text has been used for stuffing hidden text for as long as I can remember. Still, it's a shame to loose this key element of allowing robot accessibility for image heavy pages, just as business and even government bodies are starting to take Web accessibility seriously.
With any luck, Google will find that it wasn't a major spam problem and set things back (as they did after ignoring guestbook links for a while this time last year).
I find this interesting?
Appreciate your comments.
All best
X-Global Test Engineer, (Forbes 50 Top Ten org.)
In fact the change may even do the disabled some good, if it encourages webmasters to use plain text instead of pictures for everything.
One example is www.risepartners.com alt tags are for these handicaped peoples.
I had to make sure I did not optimize the alt tags and keep them descriptive to exactly the point of the images etc.
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Moment of Silece - Space Shuttle Columbia - God bless the family of all those lost.
What I really forgot was to number the points correctly -- they should have been 1) to 8) --- that's what comes through posting in a hectic day.
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ciml :
stevew, some of our results are similar but some are quite different.
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They are my observations only -- what are yours?
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GGG :
a consensus on whether we do index it, let alone whether we should..
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Don't know if you do, but that was my best guess.
As for whether you should ... for my 2 pence (UK, y'see) I'd say yes to indexing alt text that describes the image but no to anything that's too obviously tied in with keywords. Maybe only when there isn't much overall text content on the page. But definitely some kind of consideration when an image is used for a link.
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Hollywood, I agree that alt text is great for accessibility, and that we should use that information to the degree we can. Google tries to make its site very accessible to text browsers for just this reason--and we'd appreciate any accessibility advice about the google.com site.
The fact that alt text is usually hidden means that it's open to abuse, and Google has to take that into account when we're scoring pages. But I think we strike a pretty good balance on alt text.
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Hollywood, I'm in two minds on whether Google's change is good or bad for disabled accessibility.
On the one hand people interested in robot usability want Google to be able to understand the words on the page, so they are encouraged to facilitate non visual use even if they aren't clued up on accessible Web design. This is good for visually impaired users.
On the other hand, people have been taking advantage of alt text for keyword stuffing. This is bad for visually impaired users.
The "inevitable, but sad" subtitle for this thread isn't meant to criticise Google's decision; it's unfortunate that they have to make these kinds of choices.
stevew:
> what are yours?
I don't see any bold weighting in this month's index.
Just be sure that the Google website Algo takes into account this disabled persons angle on how their browsers read to them the information on the page and how it indexes sites that will benefit a disabled person by using the alt info.
I had used an example earlier www.risepartners.com sort of simple but made for disabled persons.
God bless all today
- Have a look at your page using Lynx and see if it makes sense. I would suggest that this gives a good idea of what is legitimate ALT text and what isn't