The Literary Style of Alt-Text

The meditative art of describing images in words

Clive Thompson

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A group of alphabetic dice spelling out the words “ALT TEXT”. They are on a white surface and surrounded on all sides by perhaps two dozen similar dice that have random letters that spell nothing. Each die has a small hole going through the center; they’re the type of dice you see used to make bracelets that spell out messages

See that image above? When I posted it, I wrote some alt-text for it — i.e. a description of what’s in the image.

Here’s what I wrote:

A group of alphabetic dice spelling out the words “ALT TEXT”. They are on a white surface and surrounded on all sides by perhaps two dozen similar dice that have random letters that spell nothing. Each die has a small hole going through the center; they’re the type of dice you see used to make bracelets that spell out messages

This is new behavior for me — but one that has opened some interesting writerly doors.

Lemme unpack this …

For years, I rarely included alt-text when I posted images online.

I knew I was supposed to. There are many excellent things that alt-text does — the chief of which is that it makes images accessible to anyone who’s sight-impaired. If there’s alt-text, then their screen-reader software can tell them what’s going on in the images. If not …

A screenshot of a conversation on Mastodon. The user “Alt Text Hall of Fame “ (whose screen name is @alttexthalloffame) posts the question reading: “A question for blind and visually impaired folks: What is it like to browse social media without properly described images?” Then the user Casey Reeves (whose screen-name is @xogium@tech.lgbt) replies: “Image. Image. Image. Image. Or with auto-generated bad text: picture possibly containing people.”

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Clive Thompson
Clive Thompson

Written by Clive Thompson

I write 2X a week on tech, science, culture — and how those collide. Writer at NYT mag/Wired; author, “Coders”. @clive@saturation.social clive@clivethompson.net

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