Accessibility Statement

Accessibility Statement

Accessibility Statement — Scammers Expose

Our commitment to making scam-recovery information accessible to everyone — including readers with visual, auditory, cognitive, or motor impairments.

Last Updated: May 2026
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Our Commitment

Scammers Expose is committed to making our website accessible to people of all abilities. Scam victims need recovery information urgently and clearly — accessibility is not optional. We aim to meet the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1 Level AA as a minimum standard.

✅ Why this matters: Scam-recovery content can save someone’s savings. If a screen reader can’t parse our recovery steps, or a low-contrast page makes guidance unreadable, we’ve failed the person who needs us most.
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Standards We Aim For

Our accessibility work is guided by the following standards and frameworks:

📐

WCAG 2.1 Level AA

The international web accessibility standard. We aim for Level AA compliance on all content pages.

🇪🇺

EU Accessibility Act

The European Accessibility Act requirements applicable to digital services in the EU.

🇺🇸

ADA / Section 508

US Americans with Disabilities Act and Section 508 standards for web content.

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UK Equality Act 2010

UK accessibility requirements for online services accessible to UK readers.

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Features We Provide

Scammers Expose includes the following accessibility features:

  • Semantic HTML structure — proper headings (H1-H6), lists, and landmark regions that screen readers can navigate.
  • Alt text on images — every meaningful image has descriptive alt text. Decorative images are marked as such.
  • Keyboard navigation — all interactive elements (links, forms, buttons) are reachable and operable with keyboard only.
  • Visible focus indicators — keyboard focus is clearly visible on interactive elements.
  • Sufficient colour contrast — text contrast meets WCAG AA minimum ratios (4.5:1 for normal text, 3:1 for large text).
  • Responsive design — content reflows for screen sizes from 320px upward; works on mobile, tablet, and desktop.
  • Scalable text — text can be zoomed to 200% without loss of content or functionality.
  • Plain-English content — we deliberately avoid jargon for cognitive accessibility, especially in recovery guides.
  • Descriptive link text — link text describes the destination (“read FTC reporting guide”) rather than vague phrases (“click here”).
  • No autoplay audio or video — media plays only when the reader chooses to play it.
  • Language attribute — pages declare their primary language so screen readers pronounce content correctly.
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Known Limitations

We are honest about where we are not yet fully compliant:

⚠ Areas of ongoing work:
  • Older articles — some pre-2025 articles may have images without alt text. We are auditing and adding alt text retroactively.
  • Embedded third-party content — videos, social-media embeds, and external widgets may not meet our accessibility standards because we don’t control their code.
  • PDF documents — where we link to external PDFs (e.g. government reports), those PDFs may not be screen-reader accessible. The original source organisation controls them.
  • Comments — user-submitted comments may not always follow accessibility best practices.

We are working to address these gaps. If you encounter an accessibility issue on the site, please report it (see Section 6) and we will prioritise the fix.

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Browser & Assistive-Technology Compatibility

We test Scammers Expose with the following common combinations:

  • Screen readers: NVDA (Windows), VoiceOver (macOS/iOS), TalkBack (Android), JAWS (Windows)
  • Browsers: latest versions of Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and Edge
  • Operating systems: Windows 10/11, macOS, iOS, Android
  • Magnifiers: browser zoom up to 400%, system magnification tools
  • Voice control: Dragon NaturallySpeaking, Voice Control (macOS/iOS), Voice Access (Android)

If you use assistive technology and encounter problems on our site, we want to know — your feedback helps us improve coverage for everyone using similar tools.

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How to Report an Accessibility Issue

1

Email us

Send a message to info@scammersexpose.com with the subject line “Accessibility Issue.”

2

Tell us what you experienced

Describe the issue — what you were trying to do, what happened (or didn’t happen), and the URL where it occurred.

3

Tell us your setup

If possible, include your operating system, browser, and any assistive technology you were using. This helps us reproduce the issue.

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We respond within 5 business days

We’ll acknowledge your report, investigate, and either fix the issue or explain our plan and timeline if it requires more work.

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Alternative Formats

If you cannot access information on Scammers Expose in the format we provide it, contact us. We can usually offer the same information in a different format on request — for example:

  • Text-only versions of articles with complex formatting
  • Plain-text summaries of long policy pages
  • Email responses providing scam-recovery steps directly

Email info@scammersexpose.com with your request and the format you need.

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Enforcement & Complaints

If you are not satisfied with our response to an accessibility complaint, you may escalate to your national equality or accessibility body:

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Our Accessibility Roadmap

This is an ongoing commitment, not a finished project. Our priorities for the next 12 months include:

  • Auditing and adding alt text to all pre-2025 articles
  • Improving keyboard navigation in the site’s mobile menu
  • Adding skip-to-content links on all pages
  • Improving form-field labelling on the Report a Scam page
  • Conducting a third-party WCAG 2.2 audit

We will update this statement as we make progress.

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Contact

For accessibility questions, feedback, or requests for alternative formats:

Found an accessibility issue?

Tell us. We take accessibility seriously and prioritise fixes that affect scam victims trying to access recovery information.

Last reviewed: May 2026