“…Consequently, just as a tipping point for book readers with enough resources (of skill, time, and money) to read was reached, these days increasing numbers of people have the resources—e.g., digital awareness ( Reddy et al., 2020 ), affordable data plans ( Cable.Co.UK, n.d. ), ownership or sharing-arrangements for SIM cards or smartphones ( Amiri Sani, Boos, Yun and Zhong, 2014 ; Donner, 2007 ; Wyche et al., 2015 ), stable electrical infrastructures or solar-charging panels in rural or remote areas to keep phones charged ( Almeida and Brito, 2015 )—to access digitally available content. Paralleling the accessibility to books (and other print media), which did not guarantee access to everyone but positioned accessibility as a critical part of culture and citizenship ( Sanya, 2017 ) beyond a certain tipping point, so has digital accessibility passed a tipping point to become a critical part of present-day culture and citizenship ( Choi, 2016 ; Sanya and Odero, 2017 )—without yet safeguarding access for everyone and thus inadvertently or deliberately excluding some. Indeed, Ribot and Peluso (2003) persuasively argue that providing availability without enabling accessibility represents a shortfall for any intervention; as such, availability with inadequate accessibility limits the reach of any diffusion of an innovation ( Kee, 2017 ; Rice, 2009 ).…”