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Microsoft takes a stand against corporate April Fool’s jokes

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Microsoft is a serious company with no time for jokes.
Microsoft is a serious company with no time for jokes.

Image: Joan Cros / NurPhoto via Getty Images

April Fool’s Day is a collectively sanctioned excuse to lie to people once every year. Tech companies, in particular, love making goofy announcements on the first day of April to celebrate, but one major industry player will sit out the annual tradition in 2019.

This year, Microsoft has strongly discouraged its employees from doing any April Fool’s stunts, at least in front of the public. The order was given by marketing exec Chris Capossela in an internal memo obtained by The Verge.

Mashable confirmed with Microsoft that the memo is indeed real.

Long story short, Capossela is worried that any prank Microsoft tries to pull could get taken seriously by people who forget what day it is. 

“Considering the headwinds the tech industry is facing today, I’m asking all teams at Microsoft to not do any public-facing April Fools’ Day stunts,” Caposella wrote in the memo. “I appreciate that people may have devoted time and resources to these activities, but I believe we have more to lose than gain by attempting to be funny on this one day.”

Microsoft could have done some classic Zune jokes on April Fool's day this year.

Microsoft could have done some classic Zune jokes on April Fool’s day this year.

Image: David Howells / Corbis via Getty Images

Microsoft may have a point here. News moves quickly these days, and there are legitimate concerns about the way fake articles can spread on social media unchallenged. Even something as innocuous as an April Fool’s prank about the Zune or Windows M.E. could unintentionally pass through a filter somewhere and create headaches for Microsoft’s PR department.

With Microsoft possibly gearing up to promote hard-to-believe products like an Xbox One that doesn’t have a disc drive, the company might need to stay on the side of truth as much as possible this year. It will be worth watching how other tech companies respond to this. Some might eventually follow suit, while others could use the void created by Microsoft to come up with even more grandiose gags. 

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