Currently there are three very related accessibility tags:
The "main" one, accessibility:
Accessibility seeks to make an application or website usable by everyone, including people with disabilities such as visual, auditory, ambulatory, or cognitive impairment.
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Adding accessibility to apps increases the app's reach and versatility
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Web accessibility is about making web content, including web applications, accessible for people with disabilities and elderly people. This includes compatibility with screen readers and screen magnifiers. Making a web site or web application accessible may include, but is not limited to, making it conform to accessibility standards such as the W3C's Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG).
I might be completely wrong about this, but it seems to me that the latter two tags doesn't add any important information that is not already given by using the accessibility tag. For example, a question about adding accessibility to an android app is better tagged as android accessibility than androidandroid-accessibilityaccessibility or any other combination of the three.
My suggestion is to simply make those two tags synonyms for the "main" tag - accessibility (personally I don't have any score there to suggest it).
Some more stats about the tags:
tag | questions | watchers |
---|---|---|
accessibility | 6,150 | 1.4k |
android-accessibility | 325 | 44 |
web-accessibility | 217 | 119 |
It is notable that the wiki for web-accessibility is a bit more elaborate than the others. In such case that the synonym is done, the wiki from that tag might be merged into the one of accessibility for completeness.
web-accessibility
should probably stay separate, because there are industry standards specific to web accessibility (like WCAG) which people could be experts in, but which experts in accessibility more generally may not be experts in. Perhaps that's a decent test for whether a more specific accessibility tag should stay - are there industry standards specific to that domain?web-accessibility
tag then it's more likely to be used by people who don't know about the standards, but whose questions would benefit from answers by experts on those standards.