USA TODAY US Edition

Facebook Live to add closed captioning,

- Jessica Guynn @jguynn USA TODAY

Facebook says it’s bringing closed captioning to Facebook Live to make at least some of the videos streamed live on the social network accessible to people who are deaf and hard of hearing.

Not all Live videos will have closed captions. But if publishers deploy captions and if Facebook users turn them on, they automatica­lly will see closed captions on Live broadcasts, Facebook’s director of accessibil­ity Jeffrey Wieland told USA TODAY. Facebook videos that are not livestream­ed already had this capability, but only if the publishers offered captions.

The move is part of the broader push at Facebook to make more of its content accessible to more people. More than 5% of the world’s population, about 360 million people, are deaf and hard of hearing. About 30 million people in the U.S. have some degree of hearing loss, a figure likely to increase as the population ages.

“It’s absolutely an imperative for the deaf and hard of hearing community, so our hope really is that we can continue to build more and more tools in the captioning space that increase the amount of videos that have captioning both real time and otherwise,” Wieland said.

Too often people who are deaf and hard of hearing are unable to watch online video clips because the captioning is wildly inaccurate or because there is no captioning at all. The accuracy of captions for live television and Internet frequently are worse.

Captions are a key accessibil­ity tool, says Rikki Poynter, 25, a deaf YouTuber who advocates for more and better closed captioning.

“We want and need to be able to understand online content, especially if these videos contain informatio­n like weather announceme­nts and forecasts, anything regarding politics, etc. Obviously, all online content being captioned is important to me, but it’s extra important when it can cause an effect on our lives,” Poynter said in an email. “We just want to watch fun videos, too.”

Closed captioning is mandated on television but not on the Internet. It was developed in the 1970s to make television accessible to deaf and hard of hearing viewers but is also widely used by people who have no hearing difficulti­es. In fact, Wieland says Facebook has found that people engage more with videos that have captions.

Facebook said it does not know how many of its videos have closed captions. That’s because the responsibi­lity for providing them falls on video publishers.

Starting in 2014, Facebook made it possible for publishers to add closed captions via a text file when uploading videos to their pages. Publishers can also use Facebook’s speech recognitio­n service to generate automatic captions for videos on their pages that can then be edited. Facebook says it’s exploring technology to improve captioning on video.

With the latest updates to Facebook Live, publishers who have their own captioning technology will be able to add captions to Live videos, Wieland said. Publishers who don’t create their own captions can work with vendors to insert captions into Live broadcasts, he said.

“I think it’s a great idea,” Poynter said.

Closed captions, like other accessibil­ity features, were an afterthoug­ht for much of the Internet. But tech companies are under growing pressure to address the pervasive lack of accessibil­ity as the world’s population grows and ages and as more of everyday life takes place online. Dependent on growth, these companies cannot afford to overlook large swaths of the population.

They also could face some legal exposure. It’s unclear if websites and mobile apps are legally required to provide equal access to people with disabiliti­es under the 1990 Americans with Disabiliti­es Act, which became law before the Internet was as ubiquitous as it is today. But consumers and their advocates are filing lawsuits, claiming tech companies have just as much of a legal obligation to make their services accessible.

The challenge for companies such as Facebook and Google’s YouTube: the growing number of online video clips flooding those services. More and more, these companies are leaning on artificial intelligen­ce to automatica­lly generate captions or on community members to volunteer captions.

YouTube first launched closed captions in 2006. Three years later it began using automatic speech recognitio­n to add closed captioning to YouTube videos. YouTube users watch videos with these captions many millions of times each day, but the captions too often are riddled with errors. Poynter’s campaign #NoMoreCrap­tions called out “crappy” captions on YouTube.

Google’s automatic captions have improved over the years, she says, so the words are mostly correct but the grammar still isn’t. “Everything is a run-on sentence, and there’s no punctuatio­n,” Poynter said.

One of the worst problems are community contribute­d captions.

“Some of the biggest YouTubers use that method to get captions, and a lot of people will write in unnecessar­y (and sometimes very rude) commentary about the YouTuber or things in general. It’s one thing when everything is written incorrectl­y as far as grammar and stuff goes, but to deliberate­ly add in such content is worse,” Poynter said.

Facebook says it’s a business imperative to build closed captioning tools for video. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has predicted that videos will become a primary way that people share on Facebook in coming years.

“We have always felt that our mission of connecting everybody in the world means everyone. And in order for us to include people who are deaf and hard of hearing as equal members of our platform, we have to build great captioning tools for them,” Wieland said. “My hope is that we get to a point as an industry that it is simply the default experience that videos come with closed captioning. We certainly have a ways to go, but I’m optimistic.”

Social media giant will become a lot more accessible for people who are deaf and hard of hearing “All online content being captioned is important to me, but it’s extra important when it can cause an effect on our lives.” Rikki Poynter, 25, a deaf YouTuber

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