Accessibility statement
Last reviewed: 27 April 2026 · Erklärung zur Barrierefreiheit
Our commitment
The Silent Signal is committed to making this diagnostic usable by everyone, including people who use assistive technologies such as screen readers, keyboard-only navigation, magnification, or who experience low vision, motor impairment, cognitive differences, or vestibular sensitivity.
Standards we target
We aim to meet the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1, level AA, in line with the German Barrierefreiheitsstärkungsgesetz (BFSG) and the EU Accessibility Act (EAA), in force since 28 June 2025.
What this means in practice
- Body copy and interactive elements meet WCAG AA color contrast on the dark theme
- The entire public diagnostic (landing, assessment, review, results) is operable from the keyboard alone (Tab, ←/→, Space, Enter, Backspace)
- The 1–7 slider exposes
role="slider", ARIA values and a human-readablearia-valuetext(e.g. “Somewhat Agree” rather than “5”) - The radar chart is exposed as an SVG
role="img"with a parallel focusable list, so screen-reader users can Tab through each dimension and hear its score individually - All animations honor the system
prefers-reduced-motionsetting, including the hero canvas, which pauses entirely under that preference - Forms use semantic labels,
autocompletehints, andinputModefor the right mobile keyboards - Color is never the only signal: signal indicators always pair color with text (“Healthy”, “Watch”, “Intervention”)
- Visible focus rings on every interactive element via a global
:focus-visibleoutline - The PDF report ships with embedded fonts and selectable text, not a flattened image
Scope: this statement covers the public surfaces (landing, assessment, results, team session pages, and legal pages).
Contact & reporting
If something is not usable for you, please write to ivan@ikaracic.com. Describe the page and what you needed to do; we will respond within five working days and aim to fix verified issues within one calendar month.
Enforcement procedure
If you do not receive a satisfactory response within one month, you may contact the supervisory authority responsible for accessibility supervision in your federal state in Germany. For North Rhine-Westphalia, this is the Ministerium für Arbeit, Gesundheit und Soziales (MAGS NRW).
Other policies
See also the Privacy policy and the Impressum.