Harnessing AI for a better human life.
That sentence — written by our co-founder Jordan, who lives with profound vision and hearing loss — is the reason this page exists, and the reason it gets more care than the rest of our site combined. If our work doesn't reach every customer with dignity, the rest of what we do doesn't count.
Our commitment
Emaration LLC commits to making emaration.ai, every audit we deliver, and every retainer deliverable usable by people with disabilities. That means people who use screen readers, switch devices, voice control, screen magnifiers, captioned audio, larger text, calmer motion, dyslexia-friendly fonts, or any combination of those.
We hold ourselves to WCAG 2.1 Level AA as the floor, and we work toward AAA where it doesn't cost the rest of the audience the experience. The accessibility drawer on this site (bottom-right) lets any visitor switch theme, contrast, font, size, motion, and request read-aloud — without asking permission and without losing their place.
If something on this page doesn't work the way it should, that's our problem, not yours. Tell us and we'll fix it.
Current conformance
Conformance level: emaration.ai is designed and self-assessed against WCAG 2.1 Level AA as of May 25, 2026. We have not yet engaged a third-party auditor. We will, and when we do, we'll publish that report on this page along with whatever they find — including the parts we got wrong.
Self-assessment is not a substitute for independent audit. We're being honest about that, because that's the deal: you trust us with your business; we tell you the truth about ours.
This page itself is built to AA. The features that make that possible are listed in the next section.
How we built this site to be accessible
- Skip-to-main link as the first focusable element on every page.
- Semantic landmarks:
header,nav,main,footer, all with explicit roles or implicit ARIA. - Keyboard-only operable: every interactive control reachable and operable without a mouse. Focus is visible, never trapped except in the accessibility drawer (which closes on Escape).
- Color contrast meets AA in every theme, and the High-Contrast theme exceeds AAA.
- Theme switching for vibe, light/dark, font (including OpenDyslexic and Atkinson Hyperlegible), text size (four steps up to 22px base), and motion (auto, on, reduced).
- Reduced-motion respect: our hero canvas animation stops automatically if the operating system signals
prefers-reduced-motion, and any user can force it off from the drawer. - Read-aloud using the device's built-in voices, user-triggered only, never autoplaying. A live status region announces when it's running.
- Form labels are programmatic, not placeholder-only. Required fields are announced. Errors are announced through an
aria-liveregion. - Plain-English copy at roughly 8th-grade reading level. We avoid agency jargon on principle.
- Persistent preferences via
localStorageso your settings survive a refresh and follow you across pages.
Known limitations
We'd rather list these honestly than have you find them.
- Hero canvas animation. The animated waves on the homepage are decorative and marked
aria-hidden. They respect reduced-motion. They are not yet pause-on-focus; that work is on our remediation list. - Read-aloud voice quality depends on the visitor's device and browser. We use the Web Speech API, which means voice variety and pronunciation are out of our control. We disclose this in the drawer.
- No captions on read-aloud. The read-aloud feature does not currently display synchronized text. We plan to add a follow-along highlight in a future release.
- Forms. The audit-request form is keyboard-accessible and label-linked, but does not yet provide inline per-field error messages — only a single summary in the live region. We're improving this.
- Third-party fonts. Google Fonts and OpenDyslexic are loaded over the public CDN. If those CDNs fail to load, the system stack steps in; nothing breaks structurally, but the dyslexia-friendly font won't render until the CDN recovers.
- No third-party audit yet. Disclosed above. Tracked.
If you find something not on this list, we want to know. See how to report.
Advised by lived experience
"I don't feel like I've had to overcome anything. I just do things!" — Jordan
Our co-founder Jordan Remington Williams lives with profound vision and hearing loss. He invented the light-up white cane after losing his vision in college. He's been a friend of Andrew's for fifteen years and is the Director of Emaration's Outreach and Community Support.
Jordan is not a consultant we hired to check a box. He is a co-founder whose daily experience shapes what we ship. Every Emaration deliverable — audit, dashboard, audio variant — is reviewed against the question, would this work for Jordan? If the answer is no, it doesn't ship.
That's the difference between an accessibility statement that's marketing copy and one that's a brand promise. This is the latter.
How to report a barrier
If any part of this site, an audit deliverable, or a piece of our communication blocked you from doing what you came to do, email human@emaration.ai with as much as you're comfortable sharing:
- What page or document you were on.
- What you were trying to do.
- What happened instead.
- What assistive technology, browser, and device you were using, if you know.
If email isn't accessible to you, leave a voicemail and we'll return it. (Phone number available on request — we'll publish it here as soon as our business line is provisioned.)
You don't need to use the word "accessibility." If something on our site didn't work for you, that's enough.
What we do when you report one
This is the part most accessibility statements skip. We won't.
- Within 5 business days: a human (most likely Andrew) replies to acknowledge the report, confirms we understood what you described, and tells you what we know so far.
- Within 30 calendar days: either the fix is shipped, or we send you a written remediation plan with a target date. If the fix needs longer than 30 days — for example, a vendor dependency — we tell you why, and what the interim workaround is.
- We track every report in a public-facing log (coming soon — currently kept internally; we will publish it as the volume warrants). Reports never close without a written outcome to the reporter.
- If you escalate because we didn't respond or didn't follow through, email Jordan at the address we'll publish here when his work email is provisioned. Jordan has authority to override Andrew on accessibility remediation calls. That's not a slogan.
Third-party content and tools
We use a small number of third-party services to run this site. We hold them to the same standard we hold ourselves, but we can't unilaterally change their accessibility behavior. Where they fall short, we work around them or replace them.
- Google Fonts — typography delivery. No accessibility concerns we've identified; fallback fonts in place if loading fails.
- Cloudflare — DNS and CDN. No user-facing UI from Cloudflare appears on this site.
- Stripe (when audit payments are live) — payment forms. Stripe Elements meets WCAG 2.1 AA per their published statement; we'll re-verify before launch.
- Resend / Postmark (transactional email) — emails to you. We write the templates; they handle delivery. Templates are tested for screen-reader compatibility.
If a third-party tool we use blocks you from completing a task on our site, treat that as our problem and report it the same way.
Formal approvals and standards
- Standard: Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1, Level AA, plus selected AAA criteria where supported by our High-Contrast theme.
- Approach: shift-left — accessibility considered in the first design pass on every page, not retrofitted.
- Approval authority: Jordan Remington Williams has accessibility veto authority over public-facing emaration.ai content and audit deliverables.
- Date of this statement: May 25, 2026.
- Next scheduled review: within 90 days, and after any significant site change.
This page is the contract. If we say WCAG 2.1 AA and we miss it, you have a right to expect us to fix it on the timeline above. That's not a courtesy. That's the deal.