New accessibility feature coming to Firefox, an “AI powered” alt-text generator.


"Starting in Firefox 130, we will automatically generate an alt text and let the user validate it. So every time an image is added, we get an array of pixels we pass to the ML engine and a few seconds after, we get a string corresponding to a description of this image (see the code).

Our alt text generator is far from perfect, but we want to take an iterative approach and improve it in the open.

We are currently working on improving the image-to-text datasets and model with what we’ve described in this blog post…"

  • @IllNess@infosec.pub
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    55 months ago

    It is for websites. This is most useful for readers that don’t display images. The feature for websites should be added for version 130. I’m on Developer Edition and I am currently on 127. It will be implemented for PDFs in the future after that.

    • @Kissaki@beehaw.org
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      5 months ago

      Where did you read this? The article says the opposite.

      will be available as part of Firefox’s built-in PDF editor

      Firefox is able to add an image in a PDF using our popular open source pdf.js library[…] Starting in Firefox 130, we will automatically generate an alt text and let the user validate it.

      See also my other quotes in this comment.

      will be available as part of Firefox’s built-in PDF editor

      • @IllNess@infosec.pub
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        15 months ago

        What you quoted is for the feature to add in images to PDFs. It doesn’t work for existing PDFs with images already.

        In the future, we want to be able to provide an alt text for any existing image in PDFs, except images which just contain text (it’s usually the case for PDFs containing scanned books).

        That’s how I read it atleaat. I could be wrong.