There’s an interesting contradiction in the world of digital accessibility.
Every day, companies working in this field improve their services, add new features, and expand into different areas of accessibility. They develop better solutions, cover more needs, and reach more technical maturity. But the path these solutions follow is almost always the same:
first, they go to companies. Then they try to convince those companies. And only after that — if everything goes well — do people with disabilities get a slightly better digital experience.
In other words, accessibility is rarely designed directly for the people who need it most.
It’s designed for the companies that own the platforms they want to use.
At the center of this model is a triangle.
For example, Corpowid needs to provide accessibility services to Company A so that Jhon (the name is just an example) can properly use Company A’s website or mobile app. If the company doesn’t take action, there is no solution. If there is no budget, there is no accessibility. If it doesn’t make it onto the priority list, it simply doesn’t happen.
But what if Jhon has nothing to do with Company A at all?
Let’s imagine Jhon as a university student with low vision or dyslexia. Most of his day is spent in front of a screen.
According to research, university students spend an average of 7–9 hours per day on screens. About 60% of that time is on mobile devices, and the rest on computers. During this time, Jhon doesn’t just visit one or two websites. He moves constantly between sources: blog posts, academic papers, Wikipedia pages, YouTube videos, university systems, digital books, and more.
By the end of the day, we are talking about 60 to 100 different digital resources.
Now let’s be honest: Is it realistic to expect each of these resources to be individually adapted to Jhon’s needs?
Not in terms of time, and certainly not in terms of cost. Especially when more than 98% of the world’s websites are not fully compliant with WCAG standards. The system is broken from the start.
This is where the traditional approach to accessibility hits a dead end.
The Question We Kept Asking
As the Corpowid team, we’ve been thinking about the same question for a long time:
What if instead of adapting websites for people, we adapted the internet itself to the individual?
What if every website Jhon visited automatically adjusted to his needs — without waiting for the website owner, without approvals, without budgets, without projects?
This question is exactly why we built Incluser.
What Does Incluser Do?
Incluser is a browser extension.
Small in appearance, but powerful in impact.
At first glance, it looks similar to the accessibility tools many of us are already familiar with. But there is one critical difference: once you customize Incluser for yourself, it stays that way everywhere.
Turn on Dyslexia Mode once, and from that moment on — whether you’re on Facebook, Wikipedia, an academic article, or a news site — every page opens in a dyslexia‑friendly format.
Prefer Dark Mode?
Activate it once, and you never have to wonder why a site is still blindingly white. Everything follows your preference. Automatically.
It’s a personal experience. And it’s consistent.
The answer is simpler than it sounds: far more people than we usually assume.
Yes, Incluser is a direct solution for people with low vision, dyslexia, or those who rely on screen readers. But it doesn’t stop there. It’s designed for anyone who spends more than two hours a day in front of a screen.
Students, office workers, doctors, bankers, public‑sector employees — almost everyone today spends hours every day looking at a screen. You don’t need to have a diagnosed disability to experience eye strain, cognitive fatigue, or reading difficulty.
Incluser brings together more than 20 accessibility features — including text adjustments, contrast controls, blue‑light filters, reading masks, screen readers, content magnifiers, and more — all in one place, with support for over 40 languages.
It’s very simple.
Incluser is a browser extension that you download directly from the extension marketplaces of Chrome, Safari, or Mozilla Firefox. You don’t need permission from website owners, and there’s no setup required on the site side. You install it in your browser, adjust it once, and start using the internet on your terms. No technical knowledge needed.
That said, there is an important — and honest — disclaimer we should make.
Expecting a browser extension to fully solve every accessibility standard and requirement would be naive. And we are very aware of that. We know exactly what an extension can and cannot do. So yes, some people might say, “This extension doesn’t handle this specific thing.” And they would be right. Some things simply aren’t possible at this level.
Incluser does not claim to be a miracle solution.
It’s a free product, it has boundaries, and we are fully aware of them. Our goal at Corpowid has never been to say, “We’ve solved everything.” What we want is to put meaningful tools into people’s hands — tools that make the digital world a little more inclusive and a little more accessible.
Sometimes, real change doesn’t start with massive overhauls.
Sometimes it starts with small, well‑placed shifts.
Incluser is one of those shifts.