Hello all,
We migrated to the cloud this past February and as newbies we are learning about this new world. One of the things that we’ve started exploring is how to do change management for the monthly releases that impact our users (thank you @Patrice Champet for this excellent post!) and in digging into what is in the release notes, we’ve been quite surprised & puzzled and are wondering what the community’s take is.
For example, in looking at the 'release tracks' for our production Jira, 'last release' April 14, 2026 there is this list of changes for this specific date yet some of them are not visible:
According to support
The Connection: Jira is flagged because the ChatOps bot acts as a bridge. To create those AI summaries, the bot has to read and process data directly from your Jira issues.
Okay, that again makes sense from an Atlassian perspective but why does this 'under the covers' code/functionality matter to me?
For us, this is the heart of the issue:
Release tracks often list items that are part of the April 14 code update, even if the feature isn't "flipped on" for everyone yet.
From an end-user perspective, if I don't see the enhancement/fix/have the functionality, it does NOT exist. It is not "released". I can see from an Atlassian perspective that the code is released but these release notes are for us, the end users. With that perspective in mind, these 3 examples are not just noise, but red-herrings and in the case of the REST API & List filtering, we will have to periodically check (& re-check?) to see if they are on and then need to do an ad-hoc communication to our users.
For us we would like to have Atlassian revisit the release notes through the lens of the end-users, the release notes audience as the current content is not trustworthy for us as we consider communication & potential training for our user base. Additionally, the current inaccurate content is causing more work for us to validate & watch for, these changes to be implemented in our environments. Kudos to support though for creating this suggestion Standardize Cloud Release Track status definitions to reflect actual feature availability for end-users, which if you find value in it, please add your voice & vote!
But is this just us? What of you?
chris sieverts
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