I appreciated this Response from Robert Martin:
"As it is, from what I understand of color-blindness is that there are varying degrees and "types". For example, my brother in law is green-blue colorblind. He can see and distinguish all other colors but green and blue he is unable to differentiate. Common among men who are color-blind is red-green.
So, for such a feature to be feasible/practical, some sort of standardized criteria would need to be created and checked against. I'm guessing that would have to be color "ranges" either with rgb numeric values or something like the hexadecimal values in CSS stylesheets. Since most websites use stylesheets any more, I think that would be your best place to start, to write some sort of code that, after a page is loaded, check the CSS stylesheet to see if there are any text colors within a given range sitting on a background of another given range.
I'm not familiar with any specific third party tools but a quick google search found a bunch that are usable for manual testing including some chrome extensions. I didn't find anything for incorporating into an automated scenario, though."
Robert Martin
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