Hungary's Plans For Internet Tax On Hold After Protests
An anonymous reader writes: When news broke last week that the Hungarian government was planning to tax internet traffic at a rate of about 62 cents per gigabyte, people on the internet were outraged. But it went beyond that: there were protests in the streets in Hungary, and the European Union warned against the plan. Now, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban has put the plans on hold, saying, "This tax in its current form cannot be introduced." It's not completely dead — Orban has planned consultations over the next year to look for other ways to tax revenue generated over the internet.
A proposed internet tax is the least of problems with Hungary's current government. Selected headlines from around the web:
The Guardian: Hungary's rabid right is taking the country to a political abyss
The Tablet: Meet Europe’s New Fascists
The Telegraph: Inside the far-Right stronghold where Hungarian Jews fear for the future
Aljazeera: Hungary: Towards the Abyss Investigating why critics of Hungary's authoritarian government believe it is leading the country towards fascism
The Tablet's, tagline is "A New Read on Jewish Life" and of course Aljazeera is Islamic. The Telegraph and Guardian are respectable British publications. They all agree that Hungary is leaning fascist.
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