This week saw big steps in AI for accessibility. In the U.S., new rules say companies must check if AI hiring tools hurt people with disabilities. Google Drive added video transcripts to help deaf users find key moments.

Microsoft's Copilot AI now helps workers by reading emails aloud and making captions for meetings. The NVDA screen reader added AI to describe images better for blind users.

Apple released new AI tools for Vision Pro headsets, including writing help and spatial videos. In Europe, leaders warned about AI systems that watch workers unfairly.

A Canada study found 45% of disabled people face online barriers, showing why better AI tools are needed. Companies must keep testing AI to avoid mistakes and bias.

Extended Coverage
Put an agent to work

Stop reading agent demos. Give one a job you repeat every week.

Describe the work, test the first result, and keep the agent available without running your own server.

Runs without your laptopBrowser + messaging appsBackups and clonesMemory survives restarts

Plans start at $29/month. Cancel anytime.

Hosted agent

OpenClaw or Hermes

saved state
Browser
WhatsApp
Telegram
Slack
“I checked the inbox, handled the routine messages, and sent you the one question that needs a decision.”
Create an AI worker that keeps running after this tab closes.
Open Agent Factory