Lawyers Take Control Of Macromedia Blogs

Lawyers Take Control Of Macromedia Blogs

The news that Adobe is to aquire Macromedia is affecting, profoundly, Macromedia bloggers.

Mike Chambers writes in his blog:

“Note, because this post contains some forward looking statements about the combination of our companies, and because we are now in a regulatory period, I have to include the legalese included below (it is longer than the actual post!).”

He continues:

“Also, because this weblog post is one of the documents that have to be turned over to regulators, I have to disable comments (as those technically become part of the document / post).”

And Mike is not the only one to be limited by all this. John Dowdell:

“Sorry I didn’t post today — I’ve been waiting on getting approval for a post — rare, and in this case, apparently low in the priority stack. I hope that this single post here is okay for apologizing for not posting at all today.”

Mike and John provide us with a healthy reminder that corporate blogs are part of the official corporate communication, and therefore subject to the rules that apply in situations like this.

I don’t think this is strange. I can’t help wonder, though, if it could be done differently? Is there a way to keep the conversation alive anyway? Couldn’t Macromedia’s approval process be faster so that blogs aren’t in legal blackout?

Thanks Kal!

More Links:
ADOBE TO ACQUIRE MACROMEDIA
Macromedia bloggers

Fredrik Wacka is the author and founder of the popular CorporateBlogging.Info blog which is a guide to business and corporate blogging.

Visit Fredrik Wacka’s blog: CorporateBlogging.Info.

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