Our commitment
We aim to conform to the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1, Level AA. Accessibility is treated as part of the build, not an afterthought — the same principle-based discipline we apply to security, applied to access.
What we’ve done
- Semantic structure. Pages use real headings, landmarks, and lists so assistive technology can navigate them in a logical order.
- Keyboard operable. All interactive elements — navigation, links, the command palette, forms — can be reached and operated with a keyboard alone.
- Skip to content. Every page exposes a “Skip to content” link as the first focusable element, so keyboard and screen-reader users can bypass the repeated navigation.
- Visible focus. Focused elements show a clear indicator; we don’t suppress the focus outline.
- Contrast. Body text and interface colors are chosen to meet the AA contrast ratios (4.5:1 for normal text, 3:1 for large text and UI).
- Text alternatives. Meaningful images carry descriptive
alt text; decorative graphics are hidden from assistive technology.
- Reflow & zoom. Layouts reflow to a single column on small screens and remain usable at 200% zoom without loss of content.
- Reduced motion. Animations (including the homepage decode effect) are disabled for visitors who set
prefers-reduced-motion.
- Language & titles. Each page declares its language and a unique, descriptive title.
- No traps. No auto-playing audio or video, and no keyboard focus traps.
Known limitations
We’re honest about where we’re not fully there yet:
- Some older research articles imported from external platforms may have inconsistent heading order or under-described images. We fix these as we find them.
- Downloadable documents (for example the Adversarial Minds PDF) may not yet be fully tagged for screen readers.
- A small number of complex diagrams convey information visually that is only partially described in text.
If any of these blocks you from what you need, contact us and we’ll provide the content in an accessible form.
Compatibility
The site is designed to work with current versions of major browsers (Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge) and common assistive technologies, including NVDA, JAWS, and VoiceOver. It does not depend on JavaScript for its core content.
How we assessed this
This statement is based on a self-assessment using automated checks and manual keyboard and screen-reader testing against WCAG 2.1 AA. It is not a third-party audit.
Report a barrier
If you encounter anything that isn’t accessible, tell us — it helps. Email [email protected] with the page URL and what went wrong. We aim to acknowledge accessibility reports within 5 business days and to fix confirmed issues as a priority.
Changes
We review this statement as the site evolves. Last updated 2026-06-02.