Adobe slashes prices following Parliamentary inquiry
- 12 February, 2013 16:46
- Comments
Adobe has slashed certain product prices in Australia, following a Parliamentary inquiry into prices earlier this week.
In a statement, Adobe said the pricing on its Creative Cloud membership pricing in Australia for individuals has been reduced to $49.99 on an annual subscription per month for new and current customers, effective immediately.
An annual subscription previously cost $62.99 a month for an online version of its software package.
Month-to-month prices has been revised from $94.99 per month to $74.99; prices on individual software have been revised to $19.99 per month, Adobe confirmed.
"Adobe continues to attract membership to its Cloud offerings, it is evolving its product offering to provide increased value to subscribers, including new pricing for customers in Australia and New Zealand," it said in a statement.
News of the price was was first reported by the AFR.
Earlier this week, The House Committee on Infrastructure and Communications had summoned tech giants, Apple, Microsoft and Adobe to appear before the committee as part of its inquiry into IT Pricing.
The enquiry follows its deeper involvement in the impact of prices charged to Australian consumers for IT products.
Join the Computerworld Australia group on Linkedin. The group is open to IT Directors, IT Managers, Infrastructure Managers, Network Managers, Security Managers, Communications Managers.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email Computerworld
- Follow Computerworld on twitter
- Best Practices for Migrating to SharePoint 2013
- Protecting Your Data, Intellectual Property, and Brand from Cyber Attacks
- ESG Whitepaper: Integrated Computing Platform Survey
- Benefits of Deploying Microsoft Exchange Server 2010 on Dell Compellent with Data Progression
- Agentless Security for Virtual Environments
-
Mobile app data protection not our responsibility, say Australians
-
NBN Co should prepare for Coalition government: NBN committee
-
Google adds more retailers for Chromebook
-
Mobile app data protection not our responsibility, say Australians
-
Opposition calls for inquiry on 457 visas












