The bottom line I think would be that a user would need to make a specific request for specific accommodations and a moderator flouted that request (like, preferred pronouns). That's generally how accommodating disabilities goes in government institutions that directly interface with the public. E.g. students with disabilities get whatever accommodations they need, so long as they submit a form to the appropriate campus office stipulating those accommodations (and a doctor's note, of course). If a moderator ignores those specific accommodations, the user would have recourse to contact the company and say "this moderator is violating the user policy and moderator policy". And if the company ignores it, the user could then sue the company. But as for "moderators 'complying with' the ADA in their interactions with a disabled user", that's a non-sequitur.