Dicapta logo with the tagline - Accessible Communication Developers.

Text: Dicapta. Disabilities Collaborative Organization, Bringing access Through the Power of Technology for All. Background image: A family watches TV and laughs.
 

Six hands hold a word balloon that says accessible

17

Years of
Experience

 

Mission

By developing accessible communications for everyone regardless of their abilities, Dicapta focuses on making sure that media, entertainment, and culture are widely available and accessible for people with sensory disabilities, as well as for Latinos living in the U.S.

 

 

 
 

4000+ Hours

ACCESSIBILITY ASSETS PRODUCED

Emerging Technologies

DEVELOPMENT

1000+

BENEFICIARIES SATISFIED

 

Our Exceptional Work

 

 

Accessibility

Technology

Media Services

 
 

Why Choose Dicapta ?

I have personally worked with DICAPTA from my different positions in companies like Discovery, BBC, Vme and now HITN and have always felt them as true partners in all our close caption and dubbing needs.

Guillermo Sierra, Head of Television and Digital Services, HITN

 
 

Our Collaborators


We work together respecting our diverse cultural backgrounds, opinions, and beliefs, with the common goal of leading the efforts for an inclusive world.

 

Xiomara Huertas

Xiomara
Huertas

Amanda Cadena

Amanda
Cadena

Alfonso Florez

Alfonso
Flórez

Adriana Casas

Adriana
Casas

 

Our Latest Newsletters

 

Recent Updates on Accessibility of Emergency Information on Television

 

Red triangle on white background. From the triangle comes out the word attention in red letters

Last November, the Federal Communications Commission – FCC - announced that beginning on November 30, 2015, “video programming distributors (VPDs) must ensure that their televised emergency information is conveyed aurally through the use of a secondary audio stream, when such information is conveyed visually during programming other than newscasts.”

This announcement is part of several rules that the FCC has been working on to implement provisions of the Twenty-First Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010 (“CVAA”) related to accessible emergency information.

Other important deadlines are:

  • December 20, 2016 - Apparatus manufacturers are required by the FCC “to provide a mechanism that is simple and easy to use, such as one that is reasonably comparable to a button, key, or icon, for activating the secondary audio stream to access audible emergency information.”
  • July 10, 2017 - Multichannel video programming distributors (MVPDs) are required “to pass through the secondary audio stream containing audible emergency information when it is provided on linear programming accessed on second screen devices (e.g., tablets, smartphones, laptops and similar devices) over the MVPD’s network as part of their MVPD services”.

You can find more information related to these requirements at the FCC Rules and Factsheets for Access to Emergency Information on Television

Related information about what qualifies as emergency information, what it means making emergency information accessible and what information about the emergency must be provided can be found at the FCC consumers page on Accessibility of Emergency Information on Television.

 

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