Personally I think alt-text is valuable for everyone, not for just people with visual impairments. I read alt-text all the time. I'm curious if my theory that a wide swath of people read alt-text is true.
#AltTxt #AltText

  • I'm not visually impaired & rarely read AltTxt (21%, 774 votes)
  • I'm not visually impaired & often read AltTxt (76%, 2786 votes)
  • I'm visually impaired & rarely read AltTxt (0%, 24 votes)
  • I'm visually impaired & often read AltTxt (1%, 54 votes)
3638 voters. Poll end: yesterday, 9:38 PM

in reply to Yehuda TurtleIsland.social

I also carried out this study a few years ago.
See: universeodon.com/@FreakyFwoof/…
in reply to Yehuda TurtleIsland.social

I love alt text. It often gives me context to images I wouldn't know otherwise. And sometimes people add snarky side comments that make me laugh. Usually, though, it just clarifies why the person posted the image - because their description often focuses on the reason they chose it to post.
in reply to 🔥Cassandra🔥

@🔥Cassandra🔥 @For the love of humanity @Yehuda TurtleIsland.social Yes, screen readers actually do read the poll choices.

Additionally for screen reader users saying I'm a screen reader user And I skip reading alt text is very rare if not inpossible as screen readers are setup to present the images with alt text and skip images without it by default.

in reply to Yehuda TurtleIsland.social

My eyes are still pretty good (with reading glasses) but my brain? Not so much!

So often I need to read the image description to understand what I'm looking at and/or why it's relevant.

It's an added bonus when the alt text is written very well. Some folks are able to craft wonderful little stories about the images of people, animals or places they've posted. ❤️

PS. Adding a reminder that folks can add alt text to GIFs and videos, not just static images!

This entry was edited (Monday, April 13, 2026, 10:02 PM)
in reply to Yehuda TurtleIsland.social

I rarely read it but mostly because I’m consuming so much visual stimuli when I’m online. As someone neurodivergent that is exhausting even when I limit it. So it’s mostly because I don’t have the energy or brain space. But I always try to include alt-text in my posts.
in reply to Yehuda TurtleIsland.social

I struggle with discerning things at low-contrast, or just knowing wtf I'm supposed to be looking at.

The text is important. The image is optional, but usually doesn't provide anything that the text didn't already do. It usually feels like a waste of bandwidth more than anything else.

I show the alt-text first and click through to the images sometimes.

in reply to Will

@scandigonian I don't mean this to offend anyone, but those of us that are vocal about alt text might just be louder than those who need it. 😅

It's a bit like that crude joke "How do you know someone is vegan? They'll tell you". This poll is the perfect bait for anyone who wants—on some level—to brag about their commitment to alt text. I'd be lying if I didn't say some part of me is fishing for a thank you. However, this poll also highlights that I too have noticed alt text has made the Internet better for me. Hence (IMO) the overwhelming bias towards "not needed but yes I read it".

@Will
in reply to Coach Spore Diesel

@springdiesel Yeah! I don't consider myself impaired, but some posts really don't provide enough context without alt text. I don't think most people need full descriptive text, but hitting on "why" you chose to include this image succinctly can greatly improve everyone's understanding.
in reply to Yehuda TurtleIsland.social

The media in this post is not displayed to visitors. To view it, please go to the original post.

Yup. No visual deficiencies. Always read it. Always write it.

With memes I tend to keep it short. E.g. I just say "finger guy meme" for the one on this reply. When it's something visual I describe it. When it's one of my cats I like to keep it funny and I use their names, "calico tortie Thebe" or "tuxedo tom Tobi".

This entry was edited (Monday, April 13, 2026, 11:55 PM)
in reply to Yehuda TurtleIsland.social

I'm borderline visually impaired insofar as I'm old and often looking at tiny images on my phone screen, so I read alt text to find out what I'm looking at. It's especially helpful if the image has text (cartoons etc).

When I write alt text I mostly aim for context rather than literal visual description of everything in the picture.

in reply to Yehuda TurtleIsland.social

(I voted "I'm not visually impaired and often read alt text" although I'm technically visually impaired because I'm short sighted. But it's not influencing if I'm able to see pictures posted here: I always wear my glasses or hold my phone close enough to my face to be able to see the screen clearly)
in reply to Yehuda TurtleIsland.social

I'm not visually impaired, but my facial recognition skills suck. So when there are images showing famous people I'm supposed to recognize to understand what the whole post/thread is about, I'm very, very thankful for alt text telling me who it is I'm looking at
in reply to Yehuda TurtleIsland.social

I agreed with you before I saw the poll results, which absolutely agree with you.

I'm reminded of a cartoon I saw of a caretaker shovelling snow off the steps into a school, saying something like "when I'm done with this, I can work on the ramp." The response is "yeah, but if you did the ramp first, then everyone could get in together."

in reply to Yehuda TurtleIsland.social

I'm not visually impaired and do indeed often read alt text. It's sometimes useful for stuff like figuring out what is actually going on in an image/video for example. I can't emphasize enough how much it helps sometimes when people present a thing they just get, but some of us don't. Especially with things like when we're supposed to recognize a particular person or something in an image. Alt text can tell us what any of it even means when otherwise we have no clue. Also sometimes my connection is acting up and it's the only way I can even know what's in a post when the images or videos don't load.
in reply to Yehuda TurtleIsland.social

I have visual impairments, but not blindness specifically. Alt-text is still used by me on occasion for additional context and those times where I'm encountering a slow/spotty connection.

I'd imagine TTS would be handy for those times my eyes are badly fatigued and I can't look at the display.

in reply to Yehuda TurtleIsland.social

it's great to find a really well done alt text but mostly I only read them when I have a question about the image. I like the challenge of writing them, but sometimes I don't do an especially good job of it. When I first came here I liked that they are very much encouraged.
in reply to Yehuda TurtleIsland.social

So much accessibility tech is useful to everyone. I use the buttons to open doors all the time when I'm carrying something cumbersome. I use the wheelchair ramps when I'm pushing something on wheels. I use a screen magnifier to make sure pixels line up when working on a code project. I can look elsewhere than the pedestrian crossing light when waiting because it'll beep when it's my turn.

There's literally no argument against making society accessible.

Svenja reshared this.

in reply to Yehuda TurtleIsland.social

I don't often read it. I have good vision and I don't often have data connectivity issues. I still provide alt-text in images I post because I know some people need it.

If you come across something I posted which doesn't have it please let me know politely and I'll add it.

in reply to Yehuda TurtleIsland.social

I read the alt text if I’m unsure what I am looking at or if the toot doesn’t explain the picture at all.
I appreciate people who take the time to actually write a descriptive alt text and do so myself.
Just adding one word that does not even describe what’s in the photo is utterly useless.
in reply to Yehuda TurtleIsland.social

Mastodon is a bad exemple of alt text : it mixes description, legend and alternative text.
Alternative text must be used -as it has been designed for- as an alternative for people who need it, not like a creative extra text field for jokes or exclusives informations. The role of alt text is precisely to reduce the understanding gap between peoples, not to expand it.
1/2
in reply to Yehuda TurtleIsland.social

more promising than my old poll results.

This was from years ago though. And tiny but close (to me) sample size. Hopefully folk’s stance has improved since.

birdbutt.com/@colinstu/1107131…

in reply to Yehuda TurtleIsland.social

The primary impact of an image is visual. It delivers and unpacks in an instant a universe of cultural connotations, a fist of meaning. So much so that all I can describe in alt-text is my impression of the image. I try to describe it as neutrally as possible but it's only ever going be a subjective impression with the details foregrounded that are most important to me. Being autistic doesn't help, because I'm faced with a plethora of competing choices.

So I rarely look at alt-text.

in reply to Yehuda TurtleIsland.social

I ticked "not impaired and often read", although I don't know that I'd say I often read it - more that I read it when it helps - if there's a joke I'm not getting, or something I fell I'm not spotting. So even if I don't often read it deliberately, when I do, it's massively helpful.
in reply to Yehuda TurtleIsland.social

I read ALT text for several reasons:
-Gives me the context of memes and other pics I don't understand just by looking at them.
-A certain image won't load (app issues, server issues, connection issues).
-I'm curious to see how other people describe images. I genuinely enjoy it sometimes as someone interested in writing, and it gives me ideas for my own ALT descriptions.