Open Source R&D Tax Credit?
Dan writes "The Center for American Progress is proposing an R&D tax credit for open source development." From the article: "Subsidizing open source software development can also be justified on grounds of economic efficiency. Open source software development enhances the ability of other developers to create new products. It also enhances the development and dissemination of knowledge and ideas more broadly. Since the benefits to the broader software development community and the economy as a whole go well beyond the users of an individual software product, a policy that subsidizes open source development would increase economic efficiency."
http://public.resource.org/main.html
Notice Al Gore was VP when this proposal was made.
As an OSS developer, I can say that working on Open Source code/projects has already paid for itself in tax deductions many times over in the last decade.
Those donations you get from the "Paypal" button on your project homepage? Deductable as gifts, not income.
Those hard drives you upgraded to house your OSS code through RCS on a RAID system? Deductable as a business expense.
The space in your house used to develop/work on that OSS code? Deductable as your "workspace".
In my case, I also host and house dozens of projects for the OSS community, mailing lists, web space, torrent trackers, and lots of other things.
That broadband bill? Deductable. Power to keep servers running 24x7? Deductable.
I also have a "regular day job", and I work at the home office, so that too, is deductable, since it is a dedicated section of the house specifically for that.
Being a long-time OSS developer and supporter has definitely paid for itself many times over in deductions alone, not to mention the Google ad revenue that helps fund the websites I maintain and support, out-of-pocket upgrades to storage, servers, etc.
Having a clueful CPA? Priceless .
How about if they quit freakin taxing me so much to begin with. A nice start would be SSI
i ncome/
From the rest of your post, I get the impression that you are talking about Social Security. You should know that the term SSI is commonly used to refer to Supplemental Security Income, which is different and completely separate from social security.
http://www.ssa.gov/notices/supplemental-security-