Compliance status
We firmly believe the internet should be available and accessible to everyone. We are committed to making our website accessible to the widest possible audience, regardless of circumstance or ability.
To achieve this, we aim to adhere as strictly as possible to the World Wide Web Consortium’s (W3C) Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1 at the AA level. These guidelines explain how to make web content accessible to people with a wide array of disabilities and help ensure the website is usable by people who are blind or have low vision, motor impairments, cognitive disabilities, epilepsy, and more.
Our website uses a mix of accessible design practices, ARIA attributes, semantic HTML, and assistive features. We also provide an accessibility interface that allows users to adjust the website UI to their personal needs.
Accessibility features we provide
Screen-reader and keyboard navigation
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We implement ARIA (Accessible Rich Internet Applications) attributes and semantic HTML to give assistive technologies meaningful information about page structure and controls (for example: accurate form labels, button roles, menu roles, dialog roles, and descriptive labels for actionable icons).
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A background accessibility process continually analyzes page structure and adapts markup where needed to improve compatibility with screen-readers (such as JAWS, NVDA, VoiceOver, and TalkBack).
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Image descriptions: when images lack author-provided alt text, our accessibility layer scans images and—where possible—adds meaningful, concise ALT text using image recognition and OCR for embedded text.
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Keyboard navigation: full keyboard operability is provided. Users can navigate using Tab / Shift+Tab, operate dropdowns with arrow keys, close dialogs with Esc, and activate controls with Enter or Space. Focus management ensures focus is moved into popups and trapped until they are closed.
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Quick navigation shortcuts and skip-links: users can access quick navigation (headings, menus, forms, etc.) as the first focusable element and via keyboard shortcuts. (Example shortcut: Alt+1 to open the accessibility interface.)
Disability profiles (pre-configured experience modes)
We offer a set of optional pre-configured profiles designed to make browsing easier for specific needs. Each profile adjusts UI, behavior, and content presentation:
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Epilepsy Safe Profile — removes flashing, blinking, and risky color combinations that can trigger seizures.
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Vision Impaired Profile — adjusts type size, spacing, contrast and layout for common vision conditions (low vision, tunnel vision, cataract, glaucoma).
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Cognitive Disability Profile — simplifies layout, emphasizes essential content, increases readability and reduces cognitive load.
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ADHD Friendly Profile — reduces distractions and noise, highlights key content for easier focus.
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Blind Users Profile (Screen-readers) — optimizes markup and provides tailored announcements and navigation for screen-reader users.
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Keyboard Navigation Profile (Motor-Impaired) — ensures complete keyboard operability and offers easy-to-use shortcuts such as M (menus), H (headings), F (forms), B (buttons), and G (graphics).
UI, design, and readability adjustments
Users may customize the site experience with controls for:
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Fonts: increase/decrease size, change family, adjust line height, spacing, and alignment.
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Colors & Contrast: choose light/dark/inverted/monochrome themes and alternate color palettes to meet contrast needs.
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Animations: pause/disable videos, GIFs and CSS animations.
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Content highlighting: emphasize focused or hovered elements and highlight important links/titles.
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Audio muting: one-click mute for auto-playing audio or background sounds.
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Cognitive help: an integrated dictionary/help tool (linked to public resources) to explain phrases, acronyms, and slang.
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Additional aids: cursor size/color adjustments, virtual keyboard, printable reading mode, and more.
Assistive technology & browser compatibility
We design for compatibility with the widest array of browsers and assistive technologies to give users choice and flexibility. Our efforts target support for major modern browsers and screen-readers, including (but not limited to) Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, Apple Safari, Microsoft Edge, JAWS, NVDA, VoiceOver, and TalkBack across Windows and macOS.
Ongoing improvements & limitations
We work continuously to improve accessibility. While we strive for full WCAG 2.1 AA conformance, there may be pages or features that are not yet fully accessible or are undergoing remediation. Our accessibility layer and development roadmap prioritize resolving known gaps and preventing regressions when pages are updated.
If you encounter any accessibility issues, please let us know so we can address them.
Contact & feedback
We welcome feedback about accessibility and encourage users to report any problems they encounter.
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Support email: wonderuplift@gmail.com
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Address (for official correspondence): 30 n gould st ste n sherdiyan wy 82801
When contacting us, please include: the page URL, a description of the issue, any assistive technology you were using (for example: NVDA, JAWS, VoiceOver), and the browser and device you used. We aim to respond and acknowledge accessibility reports promptly and will keep you informed about remediation steps and timelines.
Legal note
This accessibility policy is intended to provide transparency about our ongoing efforts and current capabilities. It does not constitute a legally binding statement of full compliance. We continue to work to meet and exceed accessibility best practices as technology and standards evolve.