:57148185 well the ADA applies to Stack Overflow since it's an American company w/ more than 15 employees, and such companies offering a service on the web have to comply with the ADA vis-a-vis their website. That being said, the ADA itself doesn't have metrics on "ADA compliance for websites". Most people rely on WCAG guidelines, but in short, if someone says you aren't complying, it's currently the responsibility of a court to determine whether your website complies or not. So far court cases tend to look at whether you make a decent effort to make your website accessible and, if so, deem the site 'compliant'. Also, I don't think moderators are required to" adhere to" ADA compliance (whatever that means, in regards to people with mental disabilities) in their interactions with users, because moderators are volunteers, not employees of or representatives of the company. And volunteers have expressly been ruled a few times as not covered by ADA requirements. Aside from that, you'd be pretty hard pressed to show that some moderator's interactions w/ a user were problematic _from an accessibility perspective_, for a number of reasons. Not least of which is that most likely the moderator won't _know_ the user has a mental disability.