2025-07-10
2289
#design trends#ui design
Daniel Schwarz
206214
102
Jul 10, 2025 ⋅ 8 min read

Why I don’t trust WCAG 2.2 and what I’m hoping for from 3.0

Daniel Schwarz I write about and advocate for better UX, accessibility, front-end code, and product management for industry leaders such as Adobe, Wix, CSS-Tricks, InVision, UXPin, Creative Bloq, Net Magazine, Web Designer Magazine, and so many more. Ex-design blog editor at SitePoint and Toptal.

Recent posts:

Can Adaptive Interfaces Evolve Autonomously Based On User Behavior? What Risks Come With That?

Can adaptive interfaces evolve autonomously based on user behavior? What risks come with that?

Adaptive interfaces personalize experiences using behavioral signals and machine learning. But when personalization becomes autonomous, systems can reinforce patterns, limit discovery, and shape user behavior in ways designers didn’t intend.

Pamela Ohaeri
Mar 9, 2026 ⋅ 13 min read
10 Usability Heuristics For Designing Secure And Frictionless 2FA

10 usability heuristics for designing secure and frictionless 2FA

Security requirements shouldn’t come at the cost of usability. This guide outlines 10 practical heuristics to design 2FA flows that protect users while minimizing friction, confusion, and recovery failures.

Shalitha Suranga
Feb 27, 2026 ⋅ 4 min read
Designing Account Recovery UX For 2FA-Protected Accounts

Designing account recovery UX for 2FA-protected accounts

2FA failures shouldn’t mean permanent lockout. This guide breaks down recovery methods, failure handling, progressive disclosure, and UX strategies to balance security with accessibility.

Shalitha Suranga
Feb 25, 2026 ⋅ 3 min read
2FA UX Patterns: Designing Setup Flows For SMS, Authenticator Apps, And Biometrics

2FA UX patterns: Designing setup flows for SMS, authenticator apps, and biometrics

Two-factor authentication should be secure, but it shouldn’t frustrate users. This guide explores standard 2FA user flow patterns for SMS, TOTP, and biometrics, along with edge cases, recovery strategies, and UX best practices.

Shalitha Suranga
Feb 23, 2026 ⋅ 4 min read
View all posts

One Reply to "Why I don’t trust WCAG 2.2 and what I’m hoping for from 3.0"

  1. I appreciate that you feel WCAG 2 doesn’t go far enough, but I think this post fails to recognize *when* WCAG 2 was written and *how* consensus happens. It also assumes WCAG 3 will somehow achieve more and avoid manipulation of its scoring model.

    To very briefly address each of your complaints with WCAG 2:

    1. The contrast algorithm is *not* good, but was written for a different technology / color space.

    2. Alt text has to “serve the equivalent purpose,” so I think you have misread 1.1.1 (your examples would right).

    3. Visible icon labels is as much UX as anything, and can complicate UIs. This should not be a requirement. The mobile navigation trigger on this site, for example, would fail in that model.

    4. Another misunderstanding. WCAG says captions (a pre-existing term of art) are “synchronized” and further defines how captions would be correct. WCAG doesn’t mandate transcripts, but a media alternative. Transcripts are also a pre-existing term of art (else it is not a transcript).

    5. Sign language is unlikely to be required in WCAG 3 (because consensus).

    6. Yes, focus indicators can be crap.

    7. Bypass blocks does not recommend links *or* ARIA; it’s not an either/or. That’s a misunderstanding of Techniques.

    8. I encourage you to read the history of 2.5.8 and decide if the same stakeholders would make target sizes bigger or mandatory in WCAG 3.

    I’m not going to comment on the aspirational WCAG 3 stuff since it rehashes the WCAG 2 complaints. As it is, I think the conformance model might end up being a disappointment in practice if the author feels strongly all the their WCAG 2 concerns must be addressed.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *