In the early days of legal blogging, April 1 was a day to be wary of. For a time, it was an annual tradition for legal bloggers to attempt to out-prank each other and their readers, publishing serious-seeming posts that were thinly veiled April Fools’ jokes.

By way of illustration, here is a post I wrote in 2006 for Law.com’s now-defunct Legal Blog Watch summing up some of that year’s blog-foolery. There was, for example, a report by Ernie the Attorney on the launch of Google Romance, which observed, “When you think about it, love is just another search problem. And we’ve thought about it. A lot.”

I cannot find examples now, but some of these pranks got pretty elaborate, with multiple blogs conspiring well in advance of April 1 to build on each others’ prank posts, in order to further validate the April foolery.

I will admit, I was among the pranksters, or at least I made a few half-hearted attempts. In 2015, when former-lawyer Matt Homann launched a now-defunct site, Invisible Girlfriend, that made headlines worldwide, I wrote about his supposed spin-off, Intangible Lawyer. The year before that, I covered the joint announcement by Westlaw and LexisNexis that they were opening their databases to free public access.

For me, however, the April Fools’ fun all came to a crashing halt in 2016.

That year, then-President Obama published a post on SCOTUSblog. This was not a joke — it really happened.

I thought it was pretty cool that the sitting president of the United States would publish a post on blog, and doubly cool that he chose to do it on a legal blog. So, when April 1 rolled around, I picked up on that and published what I pretended was a guest post by the president on my own blog, in honor of April 1, National Legal Technology Day.

Here is an excerpt:

Michelle and I recently had the opportunity to speak with a lawyer in a small town in my home state of Illinois. This lawyer is still using Windows XP. His only computer is a 2002 Dell OptiPlex with 512 MB of RAM. He is writing legal documents on WordPerfect. That’s right, WordPerfect. The Office 2002 version. His business card still lists a fax number.

Look, in the year 2016, this is unacceptable. As a nation, we must expect more of the legal profession and more of legal technology. This isn’t just about having the latest whiz-bang toys. It’s about driving our economy. It’s about protecting our citizens. It’s about preserving our status as a nation of laws.

Honestly, it never occurred to me that anyone would take this seriously. I thought I had sufficiently stretched credulity by suggesting that the leader of the free world had singled out this blog for a guest appearance. I emphasized the April 1 date. And I didn’t really think anyone would buy into such a thing as National Legal Technology Day.

But buy into it they did.

As I explained in a subsequent post, several readers believed the post was real. One reader was so enthused about the president’s recognition of legal technology that she circulated the post among a group of her professional peers. That reader let me know that she felt hurt that the incident had tarnished her reputation — and she believed it had also tarnished mine. In fact, several readers complained that my post had crossed a line and violated their trust in this blog.

If anyone felt the fool after that, it was me.

I regretted giving any reader any reason to question this blog’s credibility. I apologized then to all my readers and swore off any more April Fools’ posts.

So for anyone who still celebrates April 1 as National Legal Technology Day, I hate to break the news, but it’s a holiday that isn’t.

Photo of Bob Ambrogi Bob Ambrogi

Bob is a lawyer, veteran legal journalist, and award-winning blogger and podcaster. In 2011, he was named to the inaugural Fastcase 50, honoring “the law’s smartest, most courageous innovators, techies, visionaries and leaders.” Earlier in his career, he was editor-in-chief of several legal publications, including The National Law Journal, and editorial director of ALM’s Litigation Services Division.