1. Commitment to Accessibility
We want this website, including the Legal & Trust Center, to be usable by as many people as possible, including people who navigate by keyboard, use a screen reader, or need reduced motion. We aim to improve accessibility in alignment with recognized accessibility practices (such as the WCAG guidelines), rather than claiming a formal certification we don't hold.
2. Ongoing Improvement
Accessibility is an ongoing process. As part of building this Legal & Trust Center, we specifically reviewed and improved: keyboard focus visibility on links and buttons, a "skip to content" link on every legal page, heading order within each policy, labeled form controls in the cookie preference center, descriptive button names (e.g. "Accept All," "Reject Non-Essential" rather than just icons), and a reduced-motion media query that disables non-essential animation for people who request it at the operating-system level.
3. Supported Interaction Methods
The site is designed to be usable with a mouse, touch, or keyboard alone, and to work with standard screen readers on modern browsers. Interactive elements (the mobile menu, table of contents, cookie preference toggles) are built with real buttons/links and visible focus states rather than non-semantic clickable divs.
4. Keyboard Navigation
You can tab through navigation links, the table of contents, cookie preference controls, and footer links in a logical order. The cookie preference modal can be closed with the Escape key, and focus outlines are visible on interactive elements throughout the Legal & Trust Center.
5. Readable Contrast
Legal Center body text uses a dark ink tone (not light gray on white) against the light background for better readability, and interactive links are underlined in addition to being colored, so they don't rely on color alone to be identified.
6. Semantic Structure
Each legal page uses a single top-level heading (h1) for the policy title, h2 for each numbered section, and proper landmark elements (<main>, <article>, <nav>) so assistive technology can navigate the page structure directly rather than only reading top to bottom.
7. Responsive Design
Pages are designed to work from small phone screens up to large desktop monitors without horizontal scrolling, with touch targets sized for comfortable tapping on mobile and a collapsible table of contents that doesn't crowd the page on small screens.
8. Known Limitations
We haven't yet run a full formal accessibility audit against every WCAG success criterion, and some interactive marketing elements elsewhere on the site (for example, animated hero graphics) may not be fully optimized for assistive technology yet. We treat these as things to keep improving, not as settled.
9. Feedback Process
If you hit an accessibility barrier anywhere on this site, please tell us at with the page and what happened. We'll look into it and prioritize a fix.