yvonne_l_d wrote:
Daze wrote:
Don't they have the right to have want they want as long as it is with the TOS?
Daze, I believe the point is not to get the person in trouble, necessarily, but to bring to TNT's attention that Neopets needs to be
changed, so that seizure causing backgrounds are not possible anymore.
Yvonne, you said it more perfectly than I ever could.

That's my mission for today. To talk to someone in Neo about changing their policy. I already have the names of the heads of their IT and Legal departments and plan on sending snail mail to each of them, along with facts that I have gathered about flicker-rate and color intensity and how that produces seizures and migraines in people who are sensitive. And, to let them know, if they don't know it already, that various health, children's and disabled groups have asked website providers to follow guidelines concerning flicker-rate and color intensity.
From a Japanese study,
http://education.umn.edu/kls/ecee/pdfs/iea2003horie.pdf:
Quote:
Great care must be taken in the use of the following: 1. Flashing or flickering lights or images, particularly those involving the use of deep red color; 2. Brightness inversion of high-contrast images, or fast scene changes; and 3. Geometric repetitive patterns. In the light of these factors, we have resolved both to promote common guidelines for the broadcasting industry, and to urge broadcasters to set up their own internal regulations for their daily application. It is important that all those involved in broadcasting fully understand the reasons for the compilation of the guidelines, given below, and adhere to these voluntary common rules for the broadcasting industry. The guidelines will be revised as necessary in the light of new scientific evidence or research results. 1. As a general rule, the use of lights or images that flash or flicker more than 3 times per second should be avoided. In particular: (1) Great caution should be exercised over the use of deep red color; (2) Where the use of flicker at rates higher than 3 Hz is absolutely necessary, a rate of up to 5 Hz may be used, but
only provided that the change in image brightness is less than 20% and duration at the high rate does not exceed 2 seconds. 2. Brightness inversions of high-contrast images, or scene changes in which the image brightness changes by more than 20%, should as a general rule be limited to the rate of 3 Hz. 3. Geometric repetitive patterns (stripes, spirals, concentric circles, etc.) which occupy a large proportion of the screen should be avoided.
For anyone wanting to know more information about photosensitive epilepsy and how flicker rate on the web, especially with he color red, affects people with that type of epilepsy, this is a great site:
http://juicystudio.com/article/photosensitive-epilepsy.phpAs the author points out:
Quote:
The safest way to avoid causing photosensitive epilepsy is to completely avoid creating web content that flickers.
I will keep my fellow PPTers apprised of any responses I get from Neopets.
Tested made this fabulous set for me!!! Isn't it great?