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Tech at Night: Amazon Internet Tax, Privacy, Google

Tech at Night

California’s Democrats, having refused to get tough with the unions who coincidentally will fund their re-election campaigns, are still determined to raise taxes. So they continue to push for an unconstitutional Amazon Tax on the Internet that just might cost the state more than it brings in, in the long run. They’re playing with “thresholds” to try to focus the bill on specific companies like Amazon, narrowing the tax base and making the idea even worse! So yes, as Calbuzz says, it’s still a bad deal for California.

And just think, soon the rest of the country going to face the same problem as Dick Durbin’s Internet Tax would target Amazon nationally.

The House is making noises about privacy in response to rumors that Apple and other companies are tracking where people move on their phones. The problem is, unless there’s actual sending of this data places, there is no problem. If caching of locations saves battery, then we want this feature, and for government to bully firms into disabling it would make us all pay. So let’s hope this stops with some letters.

Secure your home networks, folks. I said it after Google WiSpy, I said it about Firesheep, and I’ll say it again: If your home network isn’t encrypted and password protected, it will get abused. Yes, it’s a hassle entering long, random keys into your iPhone, Wii, and Kindle, but it’s worth it.

Rumor has it that the Playstation Network is done not because of Anonymous attacks (and in fact, Anonymous was on 4chan today pleading with the community not to hold it accountable for the outage, and disavowing any connection with it), but because Sony made another terrible error in its software engineering. First the broken Playstation 3 encryption made Sony look incompetent. If PSN is just as broken, then this is a sign of endemic incompetence at the firm.

And to close the night, eighth grader Melissa Yu won a C-SPAN award for a video on Net Neutrality. Yes, she mentions that the PCCC’s Net Neutrality pledge signers went 0 for 95 in 2010, and so proponents of NN have to go the regulatory route to get what they want. Good job.

COMMENTS

  • jiminga

    if this government hassling of Amazon caused them to move offshore? Doesn’t anyone in government realize that corporate taxes get passed on to consumers? I suppose it’s politically better to go after the evil corporations than citizens, even though the sheeple are unaware they are really paying the taxes.

  • http://www.nighttwister.com NightTwister

    Location tracking should be able to be turned off by the user. Collecting and saving user-identifiable location information means it can be hacked. Apple (and Google) should’ve been up front about this from the beginning.

  • juumanistra

    Such misfortune as Sony has endured couldn’t befall a nicer developer. This is what you get for breaking Square!

    …no, wait, Square’s slide into mediocrity has been entirely by its own hands. Natch.

  • jaykali

    I do wonder how long it will last, I’ve thought for years that this seems like a big loophole that the govt will figure out how to close. I know in Arkansas we have a streamline sales tax that I guess taxes internet businesses somehow but I buy crap from Amazon untaxed all the time so maybe it just makes them stronger.

    It is great but odd to me how some internet businesses charge tax while others don’t. If I buy from target or whatever I pay tax. Amazon has shipping warehouses all over the place don’t they? I don’t get it but I’ll enjoy it while it lasts. We but so much freaking taxes on everything its lovely to buy stuff online tax-free but I know that we are in the “good ole days” right now. This will be closed eventually somehow.

  • http://www.hakubi.us/ Neil Stevens

    There’s no “tax holiday.” Read the Constitution, particularly the part about interstate commerce.

  • Doc Holliday

    but most states do require people to pay taxes on internet purchases. You are supposed to pay the taxes when you file your income tax return. Now, we have seen that few people actually pay the taxes, and I don’t think many state’s have gone looking for them, but they do have the laws on their books.

  • http://www.hakubi.us/ Neil Stevens

    A state can only legally charge sales tax on intrastate commerce, which in practice applies if a business operates physically in the state the buyer is in.

    Which is why Amazon responds to every single one of these power grabs by ceasing all Amazon Associates operations in the states that pass them.

  • rightwingmom52

    could you direct us to a how to secure your home network site, or a how to tell if your home network is secure site for that matter.

    Thanks.

  • Doc Holliday

    because they are asking for the tax money. You make a good point though. I knew the practice was unfair, but didn’t think it might be unConstitutional.

  • http://www.hakubi.us/ Neil Stevens

    It’s different for every home wireless router. But usually you need to turn something on called WPA, and turn off something called SSID Broadcast.

    If, when you put your computer/iPhone/whatever on the network for the first time, you have to enter a lengthy password, then your network is where it should be.

  • jaykali

    I just have gotten so used to ‘tax on everything’ that I thought “geese someones getting away with something” when I buy stuff on Amazon. Like I said some internet stores charge tax, Amazon doesn’t so I still don’t really know the in’s and out’s of it. Pay sales tax on my income tax? Pffff. Fat chance. I would suggest 0% of people who buy stuff on Amazon have filed it on their tax returns.

  • Doc Holliday

    I just wanted to be fair and tell you the truth. I am not going to comment on whether someone should pay or not, that is not my business. But people do get confused on the whole “internet tax” issue. It is not about charging sales tax per se, it is a whole other tax on internet use, and possibly sales.

    They do want to go after Amazon to collect sales taxes, but that does not = up til now they have not asked people to pay them on their own.