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Supreme Court Rules States Can Require Online Retailers To Collect Sales Tax (npr.org)

New submitter zippo01 shares a report: Online shopping will soon become more expensive after the U.S. Supreme court ruled Thursday that states can require internet retailers to collect sales taxes. The 5-4 decision broke with 50 years' worth of legal rulings that barred states from imposing sales taxes on most purchases their residents make from out-of-state retailers. The decision was a victory for South Dakota, which had asked the court to uphold its recently passed law imposing an internet sales tax. "Our state is losing millions for education, health care and infrastructure, and our citizens are harmed by an uneven playing field," said Marty Jackley, South Dakota's attorney general.

428 comments

  1. "Our state is losing millions for education...." by magusxxx · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You'll, of course, make it illegal to use this money for anything else, right?

    --
    Care killed the cat, but satisfaction brought it back.
  2. Also known as ... by ScentCone · · Score: 4, Funny

    Also known as the Accounting Software Developers And Consultants Permanent Employment Act.

    --
    Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    1. Re:Also known as ... by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      Dealing with US sales tax is a huge burden for online retailers. The same logic that's used to allow states to collect tax from online sales also applies to county and city sales taxes as well. Determining how much tax to apply to an item is actually a very huge task, especially for smaller merchants. Not only is figuring out the correct amount of tax to collect difficult, but keeping records of taxes collected and remitting them to the proper location would also prove to be a major issue.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    2. Re:Also known as ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ASDACPEA .... doesn't quite roll off the tongue. Try better next time.

    3. Re:Also known as ... by atrex · · Score: 1

      Well, it's a burden on small businesses, but, it's also a business opportunity. It should be easy enough for some company to build a database of tax rates and keep it up to date, and then feed that into a web service or finance application that can provide applicable rates by address and manage the collection and payment of said taxes. The question is, how much are they going to charge other businesses to use their product?

    4. Re: Also known as ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also known as the Accounting Software Developers And Consultants Permanent Employment Act.

      Nope, sorry, but this is a Supreme Court decision, overturning an existing decision, which makes it judicial, not legislative.

      South Dakota v. Wayfair, Inc. is the styling, and the previous involved Quill Corporation v. North Dakota.

      You should go back to Civics class.

    5. Re: Also known as ... by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Really. Are you THAT unable to parse sarcasm and a satirical remark? Life must be really awkward for you.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    6. Re:Also known as ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You've only solved half the problem. You also have to know what type of product it is, how it's treated in each state, who's buying it, etc. For a while here, for new house construction, taxes were paid by the contractor, not the end home buyer. If it was a repair job, if it was under $1500 for the job, the end user paid the tax. If it was more, the contractor did. Yep, that's really simple.

    7. Re:Also known as ... by aitikin · · Score: 1
      --
      "Don't meddle in the affairs of a patent dragon, for thou art tasty and good with ketchup." ~ohcrapitssteve
    8. Re: Also known as ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Trying to pass off your easily demonstrated ignorance as merely an attempt at levity? Too bad your widespread deficit in civics education is already demonstrated elsewhere in this discussion.

      In any case, learn to tell your jokes better.

      For example, when discussing the next actual "Tax reform" when it will be more applicable. Of course, you'll be silent and we'll hear chirping crickets based on the political party, but that's your bias at fault.

    9. Re:Also known as ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, it's a burden on small businesses, but, it's also a business opportunity. It should be easy enough for some company to build a database of tax rates and keep it up to date, and then feed that into a web service or finance application that can provide applicable rates by address and manage the collection and payment of said taxes. The question is, how much are they going to charge other businesses to use their product?

      And if they use such a service will they need to pay sales tax on the payment of their sales tax...:P

  3. What about mail-order? by Kenja · · Score: 1

    If I call an out of state company and order something, no taxes. But if I do it via a web page, taxes? Seems fair...

    --

    "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
    1. Re: What about mail-order? by DaHat · · Score: 1

      What % on out of state purchases do you think involve ordering over the phone vs internet?

      The same issue exists for physically buying in a lower tax state then bringing it to another, in all such cases the buyer is supposed to report the sale and pay a use tax... which almost never happens.

    2. Re: What about mail-order? by Kenja · · Score: 2

      After this? A lot potentially. All Amazon needs to do is put up a 800 number where you can call in to pay. Could be 100% automated.

      --

      "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
    3. Re: What about mail-order? by SirSlud · · Score: 1

      Companies circumventing the intent of this ruling would simply be painting a target on their backs for additional scrutiny and legislation. There are lots of legal loopholes you can drive trucks through, but you don't do it because it'd just result in those loopholes being closed.

      --
      "Old man yells at systemd"
    4. Re: What about mail-order? by DaHat · · Score: 2

      Its certainly possible it could happen, but what incentive would Amazon actually have to do so? That would represent a cost to them for no gain, vs using their existing sales tax calculating and remittance systems.

      In the odd event phone and fax orders make a big comeback, I'm sure a state would seek to tax it like SD did here... and I'm sure SCOTUS would follow the precident they set here.

    5. Re: What about mail-order? by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      At which point, you get hit with additional damages for intent to circumvent the law.

    6. Re:What about mail-order? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You'd have to look at the state law. In this case the Supreme Court agreed with South Dakota's law that requires out-of-state sellers who do more than $100,000 of business in the state or more than 200 transactions annually with state residents to collect sales tax and turn it over to the state. Doesn't exactly specify Internet Only transactions.

    7. Re: What about mail-order? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All it would take is for me to put all my items in my shopping cart in a wish list and then call the retailer to go ahead and order the wishlist with the credit card on file. All I did online was specify a wishlist, not place an order, right? Does that circumvent the intent of the law, because the actual business was done over the phone?

    8. Re: What about mail-order? by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      Its certainly possible it could happen, but what incentive would Amazon actually have to do so?

      Not having to expand their collection activities to all those states in which they don't have a physical presence. Which is quite a few still. Which is also a cost for them for no gain, and I bet it's a bigger cost than putting up a voice recognition system. Especially since they already HAVE voice operated ordering that's massively popular, by all accounts, in Alexa.

      In the odd event phone and fax orders make a big comeback, I'm sure a state would seek to tax it like SD did here... and I'm sure SCOTUS would follow the precident they set here.

      I'm sure. But it could take a decade, if the lawyers work at it. That's a long time protecting a taxless advantage.

    9. Re: What about mail-order? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its certainly possible it could happen, but what incentive would Amazon actually have to do so? That would represent a cost to them for no gain, vs using their existing sales tax calculating and remittance systems.

      In the odd event phone and fax orders make a big comeback, I'm sure a state would seek to tax it like SD did here... and I'm sure SCOTUS would follow the precident they set here.

      Actually, I'm willing to bet that the law will be written to include ANY out of state sales, no matter the order method, even carrier pigeon.

      When the vendor is going to ship out of state, they will automagically include any taxes for that state.

    10. Re: What about mail-order? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This was a Supreme Court ruling. How much more scrutiny can they possibly get? Also, this ruling might not apply to city sales taxes.

    11. Re: What about mail-order? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      how are you circumventing the law. the law says no taxes on phone orders you are literally following the law.

    12. Re: What about mail-order? by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Depends on interpretation. One of the first things taught in law school is that law consists of two parts - letter of the law and spirit of the law.

      Violating the spirit of the law without violating letter of the law, provided spirit of the law is clearly outlined is a violation of the law. Problem in most cases is that there's surprisingly little motivation to enshrine this on legislative side, and equally little desire to follow it on judiciary side, because both sides like to leave themselves with maximum amount of mobility on what they can do.

  4. No constitutional amendment? by omnichad · · Score: 1, Insightful

    States have no right to regulate interstate commerce. As much of a problem as sales tax is online, this isn't the way to solve it. We need a constitutional amendment to even give states these powers. I'm not saying we shouldn't do that either - just that we haven't.

    This is not something that the supreme court should even have the power to decide.

    1. Re: No constitutional amendment? by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The constitution doesn't grant states power, it *limits* federal power.

      --
      Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
    2. Re:No constitutional amendment? by rahvin112 · · Score: 1

      Though called a sales tax it's actually a Sales and Use tax and it applies to all purchases by state residents. It's not a regulation of interstate commerce, it's an application of existing law against state residents.

    3. Re: No constitutional amendment? by msauve · · Score: 2

      The constitution doesn't limit federal power, it grants only specific powers to the feds. Of course, they ignore that (10th amendment) and do whatever they want.

      --
      "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
    4. Re:No constitutional amendment? by omnichad · · Score: 2

      Sales taxes and use taxes are two sides of the same coin. Use taxes are not collected by the retailer, but sales taxes are. And in this case, South Dakota was suing Wayfair, not the consumers.

    5. Re: No constitutional amendment? by omnichad · · Score: 2

      And if a retailer isn't located in a state, they're not under that state's jurisdiction.

    6. Re: No constitutional amendment? by Train0987 · · Score: 2

      "The constitution doesn't limit federal power, it grants only specific powers to the feds"

      By granting only specific powers to the Feds the Constitution is limiting their powers.

    7. Re: No constitutional amendment? by HornWumpus · · Score: 2

      Doesn't make a whitelist the same as a blacklist. Government powers are whitelisted, but the commerce clause is too vague. Deal was broken by FDR.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    8. Re: No constitutional amendment? by Albanach · · Score: 1

      And if a retailer isn't located in a state, they're not under that state's jurisdiction.

      I'm guessing that you only play a lawyer when you're on the internet? It has long been the case that a corporation not located in a state can be subjected to that state's jurisdiction based on a minimum contacts test.

    9. Re: No constitutional amendment? by msauve · · Score: 1

      No. Just because Superman doesn't have Magneto's power to control magnetism, doesn't mean his powers are limited. A limitation is assertive - "you may not do this". The constitutional debates made that clear - one side arguing that the Bill of Rights was completely unnecessary, since the feds didn't have power to do any of the things which it specifically denied. The other side said, they'll take whatever power they can unless you say otherwise. And even though that's specifically spelled out in the 10th, they still do things they don't have constitutional power to do.

      For instance, the feds have no power to fund healthcare, or the arts, or scientific research, or to own national parks or forests, or even to delegate Congress's lawmaking powers to an unelected regulatory bureaucracy in the Executive branch. But they do.

      --
      "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
    10. Re: No constitutional amendment? by omnichad · · Score: 1

      By that rationale, there's almost no such thing as interstate commerce.

    11. Re:No constitutional amendment? by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      States have no right to regulate interstate commerce. As much of a problem as sales tax is online, this isn't the way to solve it. We need a constitutional amendment to even give states these powers.

      You can argue that the Supreme Court doesn't have the authority to make this decision at this time, but Congress explicitly has the authority to regulate commerce among the states, such as by allowing collection of sales tax from online purchases. There's definitely no need for an amendment to the Constitution.

    12. Re:No constitutional amendment? by omnichad · · Score: 1

      No, an amendment isn't required to make online sales tax happen - that's just what it would take to make it happen under their own authority rather than by federal legislation. I guess I wasn't clear with my wording.

    13. Re: No constitutional amendment? by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 1

      Wow. Just wow. You read Slashdot but can't grasp the concept of whitelisting?

      --
      Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
    14. Re: No constitutional amendment? by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 1

      That's correct. The use cases for blacklisting and whitelisting are different. The constitution is a use case where whitelisting was used as is appropriate. It limits power by saying the federal government shall have none but these from this *limited* set.

      --
      Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
    15. Re: No constitutional amendment? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      States have no right to regulate interstate commerce.

      This isn't regulation of interstate commerce. This is commerce within a given state's border which to your surprise, they already had the right to regulate.

      Don't believe me? Check out states with bans on out of state plants. Entirely legal.

      There are others, of course, such as CARB standards.

      As much of a problem as sales tax is online, this isn't the way to solve it.

      You have some problem with the Supreme Court recognizing a bad decision and repudiating it?

      We need a constitutional amendment to even give states these powers. I'm not saying we shouldn't do that either - just that we haven't.

      We don't need that either. Even the Supreme Court decision noted that Congress could freely legislate on the issue. They haven't.

      Not only that, it expressly endorsed the principles of state taxation, what difference came about was in the issue of jurisdiction of enforcement. Quill created a standard that was not relevant with the facts of this day.

      Time to move on.

      This is not something that the supreme court should even have the power to decide.

      You should check the Constitution again, this falls squarely within Federal court jurisdiction, and as such, the Supreme Court is obliged to be part of it.

      Especially since this decision overturned a prior decision. Kinda strange to argue they can't review their own decision which created the situation in the first place.

    16. Re: No constitutional amendment? by Albanach · · Score: 1

      By that rationale, there's almost no such thing as interstate commerce.

      Not at all.

      In fact today's decision if you read it has a pretty good breakdown on how this stuff applies in the taxation realm (which is slightly different to the plain jurisdictional one covered by international shoe and subsequent decisions). States can't use sales taxes to impede interstate commerce, punish an out of state vendor or favor an in-state one. But they can levy a sales tax and the decision makes clear that someone with sufficient minimum contacts in the state (I think S. Dakota required 200+ individual transactions or $100k in sales before being required to collect tax) can be responsible for collecting it.

    17. Re: No constitutional amendment? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope. You need to read Quill v. North Dakota again. It set a threshold of a physical nexus, but in no way invalidated state sales taxes.

      Merely the imposition of them in a technical manner, which has now been modified.

    18. Re: No constitutional amendment? by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Just as in exercise...How would you revise the commerce clause?

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    19. Re: No constitutional amendment? by Train0987 · · Score: 1

      "For instance, the feds have no power to fund healthcare, or the arts, or scientific research, or to own national parks or forests, or even to delegate Congress's lawmaking powers to an unelected regulatory bureaucracy in the Executive branch. But they do."

      You just demonstrated the overreach predicted by the founders and the need to limit the powers of federal government. If they would've known such overreach was going to be attempted, much less enacted, then they would've been clearer in their intent.

      Also note that the Supreme Court hasn't weighed in on any of those overreaches except for healthcare, and even then they only allowed it by saying it was a tax.

    20. Re: No constitutional amendment? by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      And if a retailer isn't located in a state, they're not under that state's jurisdiction.

      That's exactly the previous Supreme Court decision that was overturned today. "Physical presence" is no longer a requirement for determining that a company that does business in a state is subject to that state's sales tax.

    21. Re: No constitutional amendment? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a misreading of the constitution of the highest order.

      Of course the feds have the power to fund healthcare, the arts, education, national parks, national forests, and scientific research.

      But just imagine how shitty this country would be if they didn't. It would be a complete nightmare. It's bad enough as it is, but if any of the lies you're asserting were actually true, the United States would be the worst shithole country on the planet.

    22. Re: No constitutional amendment? by msauve · · Score: 1

      "Also note that the Supreme Court..."

      Ah, the major failure of US "checks and balances" is the feds being the ultimate arbiter of what the feds can do. There really needs to be a tribunal of the states which is the ultimate judicial authority over the feds.

      The whole system is upside down - the most power should be at the local level, where individual votes can have the most effect (and people can react by simply moving, if they want); and with minimal power at the federal level.

      --
      "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
    23. Re: No constitutional amendment? by Talderas · · Score: 2

      The problem with the commerce clause isn't the clause itself as much as the case Wickard v. Filburn. That court case was a direct assault on the 10th Amendment by greatly stripping the individual states of their ability to regulate intrastate commerce. That case is also a significant foundation piece for most of the regulatory basis of the US Federal government.

      Overturning Wickard v. Filburn or amending the Commerce Clause would have the same effect of collapsing significant portions of the US Federal government. As such, we can practically guarantee that the case will never be overturned by the Supreme Court because no set of justices would ever want to be responsible for collapsing that much of the government. We can also practically guarantee that Congress will never instigate the Amendment process to revise the Commerce Clause because there's no reasonable expectation would be willing to give up the power granted to them. We can also practically guarantee no convention of states to address the issue because while they stand to gain power from the strengthening of the 10th Amendment, the overall gravy train of government money would shut down pretty heavily.

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    24. Re: No constitutional amendment? by Talderas · · Score: 1

      The Supreme Court weighed in on the overreach roughly 75 years ago. You would do well to read up on a number of the cases in front of the Supreme Court during the New Deal era along with the political climate of the time. One case in particular to read about is Wickard v. Filburn, which IIRC was referred to in order to support the ruling on the ACA.

      To give you an idea of how bad Wickard v. Filburn was as a decision. It's rated up with Dred Scot and Koramatsu in the list of terrible decisions from the Supreme Court that haven't been overturned. Unlikely Dred Scot or Koramatsu, which are likely to be overturned if the opportunity ever arose, it is actually quite unlikely the Supreme Court would overturn Wickard v. Filburn.

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    25. Re: No constitutional amendment? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "promote general welfare" is the power given to the feds to fund healthcare, arts, (the only) scientific research (that actually happens), and curating public lands. You are welcome for the civics lesson :)

    26. Re: No constitutional amendment? by Agripa · · Score: 1

      Just as in exercise...How would you revise the commerce clause?

      I would add, "Every judge, executive, or legislator who held that "interstate" is the same as "intrastate" shall be executed forthwith."

    27. Re: No constitutional amendment? by Agripa · · Score: 1

      Also note that the Supreme Court hasn't weighed in on any of those overreaches except for healthcare, and even then they only allowed it by saying it was a tax.

      That is a tax which does not exist.

    28. Re:No constitutional amendment? by Agripa · · Score: 1

      Though called a sales tax it's actually a Sales and Use tax and it applies to all purchases by state residents. It's not a regulation of interstate commerce, it's an application of existing law against state residents.

      So then they can apply it to state residents. It should be a piece of cake.

    29. Re: No constitutional amendment? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And if a retailer isn't located in a state, they're not under that state's jurisdiction.

      I'm guessing that you only play a lawyer when you're on the internet? It has long been the case that a corporation not located in a state can be subjected to that state's jurisdiction based on a minimum contacts test.

      If you had actually read further in your link, you would have realized that in Asahi Metal Industry Co. v. Superior Court the US federal Supreme Court ruled against jurisdiction. Further, in that case they developed a five-factor test that applies in addition to the minimum contacts test (though it probably should be a six-factor test to be complaint with the right to ethical practice of law, but as usual the court ignored the legal ethics issues inherent in the case).

      Strictly speaking, within the USA, the proper place for legal action against parties in other states is in the federal courts under the terms of Article III, section 2 of the Constitution (look up the phrase "diversity jurisdiction" for more information - note that the word "diversity" here has nothing to do with ethnicity or race, it's purely a technical term).

      Extending state power against citizens of other states for actions not taken in that state has no legitimate legal foundation in the Constitution beyond this provision.

      A state could, in its courts, decide that conduct of a remote party was inappropriate, but the options here are fairly limited. They might disallow the sale of products from another state as a penalty (though in practice this would probably run afoul of the federal authority over interstate commerce), but there is no legal basis for a state to directly penalize persons from other states as a result of their out-of-state actions, without going through Article III Section 2.

      Attempting something like extradition for a remote violation of state law would certainly be a Constitutional violation, though these are so common-place today a state might think they could get away with it. Similarly, they might try issuing warrants for the arrest of the out-of-state people against the possibility they might ever show up in the state. Note that either of these options would probably be ultimately found to be illegal, and certainly would be very dangerous for the state officials involved because infringement of fundamental rights "under the colour of law" is grounds for both criminal charges and civil suit under US federal law.

  5. Strange SCOTUS Vote by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The vote breakdown on this decision was really weird. Voting in favor of requiring online retailers to collect sales tax were Justices Kennedy, Alito, Thomas, Ginsburg and Gorsuch. Justices Breyer, Sotomayor and Kagan joined Chief Justice Roberts in the dissent.

    I wonder if Trump ever foresaw his boy Gorsuch and Ruth Bader Ginsburg joining on a 5-4 decision.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
    1. Re: Strange SCOTUS Vote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      Trump foresaw another ketchup slathered Big Mac going down his gullet. That's the extent of his prognostication powers

    2. Re:Strange SCOTUS Vote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      For Gorsuch, it's not really a surprise to me. He's a big states rights guy.

    3. Re: Strange SCOTUS Vote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Wow, seeing Roberts and Ginsburg not voting with their cohorts implies that this was actually a real close ruling and not just some right/left bullshit.

    4. Re: Strange SCOTUS Vote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Donald Trump IS J.R. Bob Dobbs.

      Praise Bob!

      He can make a million dollars, every time he screws up!

    5. Re:Strange SCOTUS Vote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Didn't you see that article in yesterday's NY Times? The white Christian death rate is now higher than the white Christian birth rate, so promoting baby murder among the gentiles is no longer top priority.

    6. Re:Strange SCOTUS Vote by Solandri · · Score: 1, Interesting

      It's not so weird when you realize this case aligns those in favor of strong state rights (typically conservatives) with those in favor of strong government power (typically liberals).

      If Scalia had lived, the Court probably would've ruled 5-4 the other way. Scalia favored a strict interpretation of the Constitution, meaning in his opinion the clause prohibiting taxes on interstate commerce probably would've prevailed. Also, the side against sales taxes on Internet sales lost its biggest proponent several years ago, when Amazon entered into agreements with several large states to collect taxes there. Amazon didn't have a physical presence in those states so nexus didn't originally apply, but they had plans to put warehouses (and now lockers) in those states so probably agreed to collect taxes since they were going to gain nexus eventually. But once Amazon entered the agreements, they flipped from no to taxes on interstate commerce, to "if we have to collect these taxes then it'd be great if everyone else had to collect them too."

    7. Re:Strange SCOTUS Vote by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      It's not so weird when you realize this case aligns those in favor of strong state rights (typically conservatives) with those in favor of strong government power (typically liberals).

      If Scalia had lived, the Court probably would've ruled 5-4 the other way. Scalia favored a strict interpretation of the Constitution, meaning in his opinion the clause prohibiting taxes on interstate commerce probably would've prevailed.

      So you're saying that Scalia was not a big proponent of states' rights? Now I'm really confused.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    8. Re: Strange SCOTUS Vote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Big Mac's have special sauce on them. Not Ketchup.

    9. Re:Strange SCOTUS Vote by fafalone · · Score: 2

      Scalia only favored a strict interpretation so long as it didn't cross his conservative values. You can't seriously think the text and founders intent of the Commerce Clause allows for a federal police force to arrest somebody for something grown in their own home exclusively for their own use in accordance with state law. Utter nonsense, yet that's exactly what Scalia argued in Gonzalez v. Raich, affirming the precedent of Wickard v Filburn.

    10. Re:Strange SCOTUS Vote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anybody else annoyed by so many 50% + 1 votes can change something 180 degrees? This seems to be happening all the time now. In a lot of cases, there is no middle ground, its either X, or not X. There seems to me it should be harder to change an X to not X by a barely.

  6. Terrible for small businesses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is terrible for small businesses, which could now have the administrative burden of needing to pay sales tax to all 50 states. It's worse if this potentially allows counties to also impose sales tax on online businesses. If it's legal for South Dakota to do this, other states will undoubtedly pass similar laws to increase revenue. Large businesses will have the resources to ensure compliance with these laws. This disproportionately harms small businesses. The problem is, of course, that states have virtually no way to ensure collection of use taxes. Perhaps states ought to turn to other ways of collecting revenue such as income and property taxes rather than passing laws that disproportionately harm small businesses.

    1. Re:Terrible for small businesses by CaptainDork · · Score: 1

      Small businesses are thriving in states that have sales taxes. That will not change.

      The ratio of intra/inter state commerce for small business is not significant.

      As stated in TFS, the consumers will pick up the tab.

      Since the ruling does not provide for exemptions, it's a level playing field.

      --
      It little behooves the best of us to comment on the rest of us.
    2. Re:Terrible for small businesses by SirSlud · · Score: 1, Insightful

      A small business that can't manage to collect a sales tax doesn't seem like much of a business to me.

      --
      "Old man yells at systemd"
    3. Re: Terrible for small businesses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The collecting is relatively easy. The remitting of said sales tax to the potential 3000+ authorities that collect sales tax is the burden.

    4. Re:Terrible for small businesses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      This is terrible for small businesses, which could now have the administrative burden of needing to pay sales tax to all 50 states.

      Actually, they get a 10% discount on that because five states don't have a state sales tax. That's how it works, right? Plus the South Dakota sales tax might not apply to small businesses. From CNN:

      South Dakota's law applies only to those businesses with more than $100,000 in sales in a state.

      Though the wording is a bit ambiguous. So small businesses only need the administrative burden to determine which of the remaining 45 states need to have sales taxes collected for and then figure out the appropriate tax rates based on product categories and whether county and municipality taxes also apply (which could kick Alaska back into play) and then apply these taxes properly to all sales and manage the process of submitting the collected taxes to every one of the 45 or fewer states and possibly several thousand other entities while also fending off lawsuits from any states they determined that they don't need to collect sales taxes for and/or states/municipalities that don't agree with the amount of taxes collected. Simple.

    5. Re:Terrible for small businesses by Train0987 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Small businesses now have to navigate several hundred different tax schemes (states have multiple tax zones, etc), That's going to be expensive. This ruling only benefits the big players such as Amazon by placing another burden on their smaller competitors. That's why Bezos dropped his opposition to it.

    6. Re: Terrible for small businesses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Ok what is the sales tax on a snickers bar? It will very from state to state, of course, but this isn't a table with a mere 50 entries, because the sales tax on a monitor will need a different table.

      This sets a very high bar, and massively privledges companies like Amazon.

    7. Re:Terrible for small businesses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're assuming that it one sales tax (i.e. 5%). It's not. Each state, each county, each city, and each school district have their own taxes. Keeping track of that accurately is going to be a nightmare. What's going to happen is that it's going to require a small business to pay a service to keep track of all of the tax rates and indemnify them against any tax collection problems.

      That means that it's not the "level playing field" that others have mentioned here. An small online business will have thousands of taxes to keep track of and report where a local business will only have one.

    8. Re:Terrible for small businesses by grahamsz · · Score: 1

      You are missing the point though.

      It's one thing to have your business registered in your home state, you'll already have a corporate presence a tax id number and whatever else you'd need. Usually remitting sales tax is one extra form that you send in monthly or quarterly depending on the sales volume.

      However you now need to do this in fifty states. Some states let you do that for free, but lots of states have charges just for being able to remits sales tax, others further require that your business be registered with the secretary of state (and also charge for that too). If you are a small (or even medium-sized) business, this will result in filing dozens if not hundreds of extra government forms every year. Plus you run into the fact that different states have different rules about what's even taxable.

      That's a huge burden for a small internet retailer, but an insignificant one for a large internet retailer.

      It'd be nice to have some kind of harmonized form that all states could agree to use and make this process less cumbersome, or perhaps go down the EU path and make businesses exempt if they do less than $100k of sales to any state would make it a bit more manageable.

    9. Re:Terrible for small businesses by omnichad · · Score: 1

      The ratio of intra/inter state commerce for small business is not significant.

      That's the whole point. A lot of paperwork for a handful of sales in each state is a huge burden - it doesn't even pay for the effort. The bulk of your online sales in one state? Filing sales taxes is easy. Especially if you only have one warehouse - everyone pays exactly the same sales tax rate.

    10. Re: Terrible for small businesses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, just set the tax rate to the max of (city, county & state). Problem solved. It is a boon to you if you do lots of business in lower tax locales.

      Louisiana has the highest state-county tax rate at 10% (New Orleans). When you factor cities into it, Chicago and Long Beach's tax rates are both about 10.25%.

    11. Re:Terrible for small businesses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It gets even better; some items are taxed at different rates than others, other items are taxed at different rates at different times a year.

      In my area we have a tax-free holiday when school starts back in the fall. It covers computers, school supplies, TVs under a certain size, certain types of clothes, etc. Some items in my area are taxed differently because they are "baked goods", e.g. they have flour in them. Other states charge "staple items" differently. Some charge based on the percentage of flour in an item. Local produce might be charged at a lesser rate than imported. Some items such as menstrual pads get taxed at a higher rate because they are "luxury items" (in there with yachts and gold-plated cigars).

      So the matrix is 2D - every state, county, city, and school district on one side - so roughly 39,000 local governments in the US - and on the other side - *every* product - or if not every product - then thousands of potential rate-modifiers.

      This would also mean that tax-exempt non profits might need a tax-exempt form for every state; for retailers there is also having to send "Nonprofit X purchased $Y materials and did not have to pay tax." to send to all 50 states.

      AFAIK there is not one "master" chart showing sales tax rates for all these locations, and for which items. Amazon or Walmart may use such a thing internally - but small businesses do not.

    12. Re:Terrible for small businesses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's worse than that. The town I live in only has 1 school district, but straddles two counties, so we're beholden to two different tax rates depending on which county you're in for one city. I can see how this could be done at a state level, but down to the municipal level, good luck to even the likes of amazon to get it right all the time.

    13. Re:Terrible for small businesses by hipp5 · · Score: 1

      AFAIK there is not one "master" chart showing sales tax rates for all these locations, and for which items. Amazon or Walmart may use such a thing internally - but small businesses do not.

      If Amazon can do it it's doable. So no doubt what will happen is some enterprising individuals will replicate what the big retailers do and sell it as a plug-in service to small businesses. Maybe Square will do it?

    14. Re:Terrible for small businesses by suutar · · Score: 1

      that kind of threshold is in the SD law and likely to be a necessity for any other state's law to pass muster.

    15. Re: Terrible for small businesses by kenh · · Score: 1

      Actually, they get a 10% discount on that because five states don't have a state sales tax. That's how it works, right? Plus the South Dakota sales tax might not apply to small businesse

      Even better, retailers get to keep a portion of the sales taxes collected to compensate them for the collection burden.

      --
      Ken
    16. Re: Terrible for small businesses by kenh · · Score: 1

      Based on this ruling, states can collect state taxes, therefore only state taxes will be collected.

      If a company has a physical presence in the state, then local (non-state) taxes come into play, just as they always did.

      This will enrich the states, not local gov't.

      --
      Ken
    17. Re:Terrible for small businesses by sarren1901 · · Score: 1

      If you only sell in one state, but online, you still have to keep track of things down to the county level. Brick and mortar store obviously has one single sales tax because all purchases are made on location.

      So even being a small business in a large state with many counties and cities that all charge different sales tax is a burden.

    18. Re:Terrible for small businesses by omnichad · · Score: 1

      This must depend on the state. In Illinois, when Amazon ships from the warehouse outside of town, they charge me local tax. When they ship from anywhere else in the state, they only charge me the base state sales tax with no local taxes.

    19. Re:Terrible for small businesses by sarren1901 · · Score: 1

      The issue is not whether it is doable or not, because clearly it is doable. It's how much said service will cost the small business. It is just one more thing to add to the overhead of running said small business. With ever increasing regulatory burdens thrown onto a startup, it is no wonder there are fewer of them.

      Perhaps if every state had a 100k threshold of sales in their state only, it might be nothing to worry about for a small business. If it means any business that does more then 100k period, then you are screwed.

    20. Re:Terrible for small businesses by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      Are you sure about the ratio?

      I know an eBay seller that sells almost exclusively bout of state.

      Probably doesn't break 200 transaction/year to a single state, but it isn't out of the realm of possibility he'll get there.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    21. Re:Terrible for small businesses by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      200 transactions is a pretty low threshold IMO.

      100k is reasonable though.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    22. Re:Terrible for small businesses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      States have tax departments that can set this up. They have a list of their tax districts and their geographic boundaries. They can get their cities to agree on some kind of multi-state compromise or simplification for city-specific taxes and product-specific taxes (e.g., which products qualify as food or clothing for states that exempt these). The states and data companies can set up a consortium to define a neutral data-interchange standard, and define how states can periodically send rate updates to database providers, and what database providers must do to offer a 50-state tax-calculation service compliant with state laws. The customer will enter their shipping address like they already do, the merchant will look it up in the database to determine the tax district and the rate for each product, and add it to the bill alongside all the other surcharges. The companies will send the payments to the state, and the state will distribute it to the jurisdictions. Many of the pieces are already in place, and similar things have been done with consortiums, inter-company agreements, and inter-state agreements. Maybe Amazon will become the gorilla provider because they already have the calculation software, tax data, and data center capacity. But theoretically multiple providers can do it as long as they all have the complete tax data.

    23. Re:Terrible for small businesses by CaptainDork · · Score: 1

      Did you read the part about, "online?"

      That's not paper.

      I use Amazon a lot and all the stuff I order is subject to state sales tax.

      It's calculated right at the point of purchase.

      They know what state I'm in and how much to charge.

      That portion is e-filed right to the state.

      What the simple fuck is hard about that?

      Even for small businesses that do credit card business online, having their payment system add that small program change that directly charges the customer is negligible.

      That's how e-store works.

      --
      It little behooves the best of us to comment on the rest of us.
    24. Re:Terrible for small businesses by CaptainDork · · Score: 1

      So, let's discuss Amazon's approach to this.

      It's well-lubricated, as is the other retailers who do online business.

      No need to invent wheels.

      --
      It little behooves the best of us to comment on the rest of us.
    25. Re:Terrible for small businesses by omnichad · · Score: 1

      What the simple fuck is hard about that?

      Building or licensing a system like Amazon's.

    26. Re:Terrible for small businesses by CaptainDork · · Score: 1

      Why in simple hell would anybody, for crying out loud, build?

      That's the thinking that spawned. and still does, in-house tracking systems using Excel or Access.

      You don't seriously think that e-stores will break out in a sweat adding the taxing module to the current e-verify system, do you?

      --
      It little behooves the best of us to comment on the rest of us.
    27. Re:Terrible for small businesses by omnichad · · Score: 1

      Why in simple hell would anybody, for crying out loud, build?

      Amazon did. Lots of companies do. Part of it is planning for long-term growth, and another part is being in control of your own systems.

      Also, the few companies that offer sales tax calculation as a service can charge as much as they want - you have no cost controls. What on earth do you think e-verify has to do with sales taxes? You're hardly making sense here.

    28. Re:Terrible for small businesses by CaptainDork · · Score: 1

      Neither are you.

      Read your stuff and think, "small business."

      --
      It little behooves the best of us to comment on the rest of us.
    29. Re:Terrible for small businesses by omnichad · · Score: 1

      Not going to answer about e-verify?

      Are you saying every small business should use cookie-cutter solutions? Where is the competitive advantage in that? If you already have a custom system because it was easy to do, you have to throw everything out in order to use a pre-made sales tax system. The size of the business does not dictate that you do things poorly.

    30. Re:Terrible for small businesses by CaptainDork · · Score: 1

      Small businesses have nothing to throw out.

      They just have to add the tax module to what they already have.

      The additional cost is the consumer's burden.

      Small businesses don't prosper because of price. Big box killed that years ago.

      Many single-owner online businesses use e-store.

      Why would anyone build?

      there are regulations out the wazoo for that shit.

      --
      It little behooves the best of us to comment on the rest of us.
    31. Re:Terrible for small businesses by grahamsz · · Score: 1

      The main issue is that it's not all tech.

      I'm sure some states support online filing, but i know my company still fills out a paper form and mails a check. You'd think states could work together and streamline this process since they'd likely get more compliance if you didn't need to establish ~45 different relationships, but it seems to not be the case. In any event it's easy for amazon to add a couple of CPAs to deal with the burden of filing all that, much harder for a small retailer.

      If states can mandate collection then it seems self-evident that cities and special tax districts can too. In colorado your ZIP code alone doesn't answer which tax jurisdiction(s) you are in and for some of the special tax regions it's nearly impossible to find out if an address is in them or not. Here's the actual definition of where denver's transit tax applies

      Counties of Denver, Boulder, and Jefferson. Generally, Broomfield County (except certain
      areas immediately adjacent to I-25 and Highway 7 interchange), Adams County (west of Box
      Elder Creek), Arapahoe County (south of I-70, generally west of Picadilly Rd. to Jewell, then
      west of Gun Club Rd. to Quincy, then generally west of Monaghan Rd., including Arapahoe
      Park and Aurora Reservoir), and Douglas County (northern portion consisting of the City of
      Lone Tree, the Town of Parker, the Acres Green area and most of Highlands Ranch), the area
      within the boundaries of the Town of Castle Rock does not have RTD sales/use tax, parts of
      Weld County that have been annexed by the city of Longmont and the town of Erie since 1994

      How do you resolve something like that? It'll obviously create a market for a secondary service that exists to figure out the applicable combination of tax rates, which again will be disproportionately costly for small businesses.

    32. Re:Terrible for small businesses by omnichad · · Score: 1

      Why would anyone build?

      Many already have. And I really don't think e-store is as big as you think, as I've never even heard of the platform.

    33. Re:Terrible for small businesses by CaptainDork · · Score: 1

      e-store is a generic offering by every web site that caters to small widget-sellers.

      Alternative names for the activity are "e-tailing", a shortened form of "electronic retail" or "e-shopping", a shortened form of "electronic shopping". An online store may also be called an e-web-store, e-shop, e-store, Internet shop, web-shop, web-store, online store, online storefront and virtual store.

      --
      It little behooves the best of us to comment on the rest of us.
    34. Re:Terrible for small businesses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If NY, IL, or CA are going to ask me to pay sales taxes for my sales to people in those states, then I just won't sell to those states. I can afford to dump sales to those customers in those states.

      I fail to see how those states are going to enforce this. How is NY going to bill me. They have no jurisdiction.

      This should be fixed by the US Congress shortly, but won't be. It's their job to deal with interstate commerce.

    35. Re:Terrible for small businesses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Small businesses now have to navigate several hundred different tax schemes (states have multiple tax zones, etc), That's going to be expensive. This ruling only benefits the big players such as Amazon by placing another burden on their smaller competitors. That's why Bezos dropped his opposition to it.

      Know how I know you didn't RTFA?

      " The state also provides sales tax collection software for free for any business that wants it, and using that software immunizes the business from audit liability."

    36. Re:Terrible for small businesses by omnichad · · Score: 1

      You said there was a "module" for "e-store." You're the one making it sound like a specific product. There are 3rd-party products for existing platforms that do this, but they are already expensive and the price is likely to go up now.

    37. Re:Terrible for small businesses by Talderas · · Score: 1

      200 is a perfectly reasonable threshold for South Dakota. The last census put South Dakota at 814,191 and the current population estimate is for 869,666. You need to have sufficient sales penetration for roughly one sale for every 4,350 individuals in South Dakota which is already a fairly significant market penetration. That's assuming your product can be targeted at all demographics. Most likely your upper end for demographics is 20% of the population if you're lucky and at that point we're talking about making a sale for every 900 people in your audience. This is remarkably penetration for an online retailer and at this point we're talking about a vendor based out of South Dakota, a regional vendor in South Dakota and it's neighboring states, or a large national vendor.

      Taking California as the other extreme, 200 transactions is definitely not enough. You only need to make one sale for roughly every 200,000 people living in the state. Again, maybe your product's target demographic is only 20% of the population. It's still one sale for every 40,000 people. If California pass a law with that low of a transaction limit and it faces challenge and prevailed, that would be a court case that was botched because at the level of penetration, the tax collection creates too much of an overhead burden to conduct business within the state.

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    38. Re:Terrible for small businesses by Talderas · · Score: 1

      I doubt Amazon built their own tax calculation system. Unless they're foolish, they outsourced it to a company like Vertex which has the infrastructure and staff in place necessary to accumulate all the tax information necessary to calculate the correct tax rates for an order. Amazon probably built the system which makes the query to Vertex or whatever entity they use.

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    39. Re:Terrible for small businesses by Talderas · · Score: 1

      Collecting is easy. Knowing how much to collect is hard. Remitting the tax is hard.

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    40. Re: Terrible for small businesses by Talderas · · Score: 1

      That was the first and easiest. Further laws will be passed to begin collecting county and city sales taxes. It may also spread to other excise taxes.

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    41. Re:Terrible for small businesses by omnichad · · Score: 1

      Indeed Amazon uses Vertex:
      https://sellercentral.amazon.c...

      But they still have a lot of work to do in order to present data and store/process the results of the query. They also resell those services. So they may have the incentive to run their own system. It really depends on how reasonable the rates at Vertex are for an entity the size of Amazon.

    42. Re:Terrible for small businesses by Talderas · · Score: 1

      I highly doubt Amazon "does it". Mostly likely the contract out to a company like Vertex, query the address, and receive all the tax information for the location. It would be incredibly stupid, read significantly more costly and less risk indemnification, for Amazon to build and maintain the information database in house.

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    43. Re:Terrible for small businesses by CaptainDork · · Score: 1

      I can see where I miscommunicated that "e-store" was a brand name.

      Had it been, I would have presented it as, "e-store."

      It's understandable that you would not know that.

      Still, in the literature, "e-store," is a generic name for adding credit card purchasing capabilities to an online store.

      The products support different features, including the ability to collect taxes.

      The increase in cost, like the increase of prices due to the collection of taxes (should a state choose to do so) will not be a shocker to consumers who already pay state sales tax on every goddam thing they buy right now.

      --
      It little behooves the best of us to comment on the rest of us.
    44. Re:Terrible for small businesses by hipp5 · · Score: 1

      I highly doubt Amazon "does it". Mostly likely the contract out to a company like Vertex, query the address, and receive all the tax information for the location. It would be incredibly stupid, read significantly more costly and less risk indemnification, for Amazon to build and maintain the information database in house.

      The point is, it gets done. And the fact that there's a third party that has this service set up (Vertex, apparently) suggests that it would be easy enough to develop a similar product targeted at small businesses.

    45. Re:Terrible for small businesses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course it's fucking doable. Amazon probably has a whole building of people devoted to tax bullshit. This is just hurting the small guys, who have to deal with accountants, and now they will get to deal with them for 50 fucking states. The " free tax software" already being offered gets a chunk out of every transaction in exchange for the end user cost, and doesn't cover audits.

      Not incidentally, they will know everything purchased by customers of a company.

    46. Re:Terrible for small businesses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe you should run a small business instead of running your mouth about shit you don't know.

    47. Re:Terrible for small businesses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Small businesses are thriving in states that have sales taxes. That will not change.

      The ratio of intra/inter state commerce for small business is not significant.

      As stated in TFS, the consumers will pick up the tab.

      Since the ruling does not provide for exemptions, it's a level playing field.

      You are living in fantasy world.

      In many jurisdictions, the single most difficult thing for small businesses to get right is compliance with sales taxes.

      These taxes are not just applied at the state level - there are all kinds of local additions to sales taxes. They are not consistent from product to product. They are not consistent from customer to customer. Worse, the rules change every year - and are written in natural language that is inherently ambiguous. Also, the rules are not tied to specific zip codes - there are lots of sales taxes that apply to subsections of zip codes. It is an enormous headache for the small business operator.

      Note that companies like Amazon only collect state sales tax - and even then they are making broad assumptions about whether or not the tax applies - they don't know about all the obscure details of the various other taxing jurisdictions that apply sales tax.

      The whole system in most places is a colossal mess - and it's a huge problem for small business. Dealing with sales taxes is a major source of frustration, and leads to a significant overhead expense, which affects small businesses far more than large businesses. It's especially bad for small business that operate in multiple local government jurisdictions. There is NO level playing field here.

      Small businesses are not particularly thriving in the current environment: small businesses have been in decline in the USA for decades. They are now a much smaller portion of the US economy than they were in the past, and we would have even fewer small businesses if it were not for the Internet and things like Amazon Marketplace and EBay (these slowed the decline, but hasn't reversed it). The excess of regulation, including the huge problems with keeping track of the complexity of state and local sales taxes, is one of the big reasons for this decline.

      Further, it's a Bill of Rights violation for state and local government to require individual consumers to track this stuff - a huge infringement of fundamental rights in a free country - so the work HAS to be done by businesses, it can't be pushed off onto the consumer.

      The whole mess is an economic and legal disaster waiting to happen. It's a clear case of a situation where the federal government should be exercising it's interstate commerce authority. One option would be for the feds to put in place simple rules that are easy for everybody to understand, and that supersede the unholy mess created by all the rules at the state and local level.

      For example: as all goods and services pay a 1% sales tax, which gets paid to the state government, and that state government in turn is responsible for any further distribution of the funds to local entities as it deems fit.

      But sales taxes are best viewed as a sneaky form of tax break for the rich. Any regressive tax puts money into the government's budget that would otherwise have to be obtained by the progressive tax, and thus would require the rich to pay more.

      The net economic harm sales taxes do is truly staggering - there's really no doubt the state governments (and others) who claimed economic harm as a result of the current system were lying through their teeth - the decision to have sales tax in the first place does far more economic harm than the relatively minor loss of income from out-of-jurisdiction purchases. The only way to fix sales tax is to get rid of it entirely. This would be the best outcome - but given how corrupt US government has become, it's unlikely the rational outcome will be the one we end up with.

    48. Re:Terrible for small businesses by SirSlud · · Score: 1

      Are you saying a small business can't take a location and product and return a sales tax rate? Jeez, and here I thought small businesses liked markets to compete in.

      --
      "Old man yells at systemd"
  7. No need for a constitutional amendment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Amendment? Congress can do this. However, they never decided to do so.

    This is truly a bizarre ruling from SCOTUS.

    1. Re:No need for a constitutional amendment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Per the Commerce Clause, yes Congress holds this power. I'm guessing that omnichad was thinking an Amendment would be required in order to say "Congress no longer has this power, it lies with the states", but I suppose technically speaking there is nothing stopping Congress from saying "we are regulating interstate commerce by letting the states collect out-of-state tax".

  8. Inevitable. by Zorro · · Score: 1

    Store fronts are closing but online sales are expanding.

    It HAD to happen sooner or later.

    1. Re:Inevitable. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      right but via the commerce clause it shouldnt have happened this way. If congress had made the law that would have been fine. The legal semantics for this ruling are going to be interesting to look at from a strict constructionist point of view.

    2. Re:Inevitable. by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      Cities and states charge plenty of other taxes and fees, the only reason it "had to happen" is because they want to steal more money without voters having a say

    3. Re:Inevitable. by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      Cities and states charge plenty of other taxes and fees, the only reason it "had to happen" is because they want to steal more money without voters having a say

      Voters don't have a say in the state and local tax laws? I'm glad I don't live in your city.

    4. Re: Inevitable. by kenh · · Score: 1

      You mean like they do on rental cars and hotel rooms?

      --
      Ken
    5. Re:Inevitable. by micahraleigh · · Score: 0

      What's wrong with preferring online over storefront?

      The latter is more expensive for the buyers.

    6. Re:Inevitable. by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 2

      Voters don't have a say in the state and local tax laws?

      You're thinking of the wrong group of voters. The ones affected by these laws are exclusively out of state retailers who obviously have no representation in the states where the laws are being passed.

      It's sad that the USSC justices on both sides of this ruling focused exclusively on the burden sales tax collection places on retailers and "lost" tax revenues to the states. Policy matters such as these are properly the domain of Congress, not the courts. The issue for the courts to decide is whether the states have the necessary legal jurisdiction to impose their sales tax laws on out-of-state retailers, and the only sensible answer to that question is that no state has any authority to impose tax collection or reporting requirements (or any other requirements) on anyone who is not a resident, a citizen, or physically located within the state.

      --
      "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
  9. Remeber this by whoever57 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "The Internet's prevalence and power have changed the dynamics of the national economy," Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote for the majority.

    Remember this the next time Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch or Clarence Thomas talk about the following the original text of the constitution.

    --
    The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    1. Re:Remeber this by omnichad · · Score: 1

      Or at least the commerce clause.

    2. Re:Remeber this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch, and Clarence Thomas agreed with Justice Kennedy in this ruling.
      (Gorsuch and Thomas penned concurring opinions)

      It's not what you expect, is it?

      Chief Justice Roberts, along with Breyer, Sotomayor, and Kagan dissented from Kennedy's opinion.

    3. Re:Remeber this by ScentCone · · Score: 2

      The constitution is silent on inter-state sales taxes. This requires a LEGISLATIVE fix to spare people with NO VOTE on how an out of state government forces them to conduct business from taxation without representation in all of those other states and taxing jurisdictions.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    4. Re:Remeber this by chiefcrash · · Score: 1

      Why, exactly?

      Here's the thing: while it is entirely true that technological and sociological advances will change many of the dynamics of the country, that doesn't mean we should suddenly interpret laws differently. Rather, it means we should adjust the laws.

      --
      Show me on the 1st Amendment bobblehead where the moderator touched you...
    5. Re:Remeber this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or maybe you should read South Dakota's petition that quoted Kennedy, Gorsuch, Thomas, and Alito who all took issue with the precedent for a host of reasons:
      http://www.scotusblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/17-494-petition.pdf

      Quill may be “un-workable” because Justice Thomas is correct that the entire “negative Commerce Clause has no basis in the text of the Constitution, makes little sense, and has proved virtually unworkable in application.”

    6. Re: Remeber this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The constitution is silent on inter-state sales taxes.

      Actually, the US Constitution(notice the proper name) is not silent, but I guess you, being Russian, never read to the end of Article I.

      This requires a LEGISLATIVE fix to spare people with NO VOTE on how an out of state government forces them to conduct business from taxation without representation in all of those other states and taxing jurisdictions.

      South Dakota's legislature already voted, and believe it or not, their taxation abilities are recognized under their sovereign authority.

      Don't like it? You are free not to do business with those in South Dakota. It'll be entirely consensual. Or you can collect the taxes, take your share for expenses, and move on.

      But seriously, Twinkletoes, your lack of command of English is showing. Stick closer to the script.

    7. Re: Remeber this by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      I always love it when you have poor information and no proper context, but still feel like you have to lie and have a little ad hominem tantrum to feel better about yourself while you stalk the people you're obsessed with. It's pretty entertaining.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    8. Re: Remeber this by nate11000 · · Score: 1

      To be fair, the opinion said that it was already wrong back in 1992, and the internet just made it worse. Itâ(TM)s pretty clearly stated.

  10. Bring back the fax machine? by dfn5 · · Score: 1

    I'm thinking the solution is to dust of the U.S. Robotics 56K Fax modem and on-line retailers can accept fax orders.

    --
    -- Thou hast strayed far from the path of the Avatar.
    1. Re:Bring back the fax machine? by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 1

      I'm thinking the solution is to dust of the U.S. Robotics 56K Fax modem and on-line retailers can accept fax orders.

      Gee, I was thinking of AI text to speech robots that make non-taxed out of state phone call catalog orders out of Internet REST POSTs.

      And AI robots that do speech to text to receive those calls.

      With a Blockchain stuffed in there somewhere, of course.

      --
      Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
    2. Re:Bring back the fax machine? by SlaveToTheGrind · · Score: 2

      I'm thinking the solution is to dust of the U.S. Robotics 56K Fax modem and on-line retailers can accept fax orders.

      This opinion has nothing to do with how the orders are submitted. All it did was do away with the prior requirement that a business had to have a brick-and-mortar presence in a state to be required to collect/remit sales taxes for transactions in that state. Mail order retailers fell under the same exclusion for a long time before Internet retailers hit the mainstream.

    3. Re:Bring back the fax machine? by CanadianMacFan · · Score: 1

      Instead of checking out through the website you would click on a button that would have customer service from the site call you to finalize the sale. Since the sale would be a telephone sale the person would have to self-report the sales tax instead of the company charging sales tax.

    4. Re:Bring back the fax machine? by theCoder · · Score: 1

      What makes you think that when I order something from a website that the "transaction" is taking place where I am located? Why is it not based on where the vendor is located? Worse, places like Amazon charge sales tax based on where an item is shipped, which may not be a state where either I or Amazon is located!

      Personally, I think website businesses should collect sales taxes based on the state where the business is incorporated. After all, customers "go" to a website to buy something. Our language implies the act of the customer travelling, at least virtually, to the place that the vendor is located to conduct the transaction.

      Or if this ruling really enshrines the idea that where an item is to be used is where taxes should be paid, does that mean if I'm travelling, forget a charger, and buy a replacement from a local Best Buy, I can demand they charge my home state's sales tax and that they remit that money to my home state? After all, Best Buy does have stores in my home state, so it shouldn't be too much of a burden, right?

      --
      "Save the whales, feed the hungry, free the mallocs" -- author unknown
  11. Residents didn't self report? by alvinrod · · Score: 2

    You mean to tell me that the residents of South Dakota didn't self-report and pay the state use tax as they are obligated to do?

    All this is doing is placing the burden of collecting those taxes on out of state taxes on the merchant instead of on the South Dakota residents as previously. This isn't imposing any new taxes on residents, merely making it impossible for them to avoid paying those taxes. If you already lived in a state where the retailer (Amazon) was incorporated or had a business presence, you were already paying sales tax and nothing will change for you.

    This probably isn't too much of a burden as long as its limited to a single value for each state. If county or city level taxes start getting involved or any kind of fuckery involving different tax rates for different categories of products, then this is going to become an absolute nightmare for online retailers.

    1. Re:Residents didn't self report? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It's already done for local taxes too. Amazon and Apple manage to do it. So does Wal Mart.

      Your protests sound weak.

    2. Re:Residents didn't self report? by fropenn · · Score: 2

      Correct. Very few people pay taxes voluntarily.

    3. Re:Residents didn't self report? by Train0987 · · Score: 2

      Amazon and Apple have the massive infrastructures and legal departments to handle it. Their smaller competitors do not.

    4. Re:Residents didn't self report? by Watter · · Score: 1

      Amazon and Apple have the massive infrastructures and legal departments to handle it. Their smaller competitors do not.

      I know it's a little off topic, but this statement sums up so much of what is wrong with complicated tax laws and our massive regulatory state. If you ever wonder why the big corps seem to stay silent when it comes to hundreds of thousands of lines of tax code and new regulations that would seem to be massively expensive to them, it's because they know those same regulations and laws that are an inconvenience to them are a death sentence to smaller competitors (who might be innovators that our society as a whole need to advance). The small fries then have no choice but to sell out to the larger companies or just shut their doors. It's unfortunate how so many the same people railing against large corporations also support more intrusive government regulations. We certainly need some regulation, but the complexity of running a business these days sets a bar so high that there's no real alternative to larger and larger entities, and that's bad for us all.

    5. Re:Residents didn't self report? by atrex · · Score: 1

      Soon to be available on AWS - Interstate Sales Tax Evaluation, Collection, and Remittance Services.

    6. Re:Residents didn't self report? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This probably isn't too much of a burden as long as its limited to a single value for each state.

      are you serious?
      keeping on top of your local tax code is already complicated enough that you need a professional

      the point of view advocated here essentially means that any online business will have to keep track of not only their local tax code, but the tax code of any government anywhere on the planet... that is just completely bonkers

    7. Re:Residents didn't self report? by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

      I want you to find one person who pays taxes voluntarily and show me this ultra-rare individual, I have so many questions.

      Right here. I pay my taxes voluntarily as I acknowledge that the government does some things much better than I ever could on my own.

      The government is much better at maintaining roads than I could ever be.

      The government is much better at educating children than I could ever be.

      The government is much better at law enforcement and application of the law than I could ever be.

      The government is much better at funding critical research than I could ever be.

      I could go on with this list if you want.

      --
      Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    8. Re:Residents didn't self report? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I used to willingly and knowingly fuck myself out of taxes by not dealing with donations and not deducting taxes from large purchases. No big deal hope it goes to something useful.
      I only stopped after I had a family but that doesn't count because I would drown a puppy every year if it significantly improved their lives.
      Are you some sort of natural born puppy drowner?

  12. paperwork nightmare incoming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    for everyone who sells anything online for a profit, including ebayers who flip stuff online for profit, every small retailer who also has a store front, online service and software developer with commercially sold licenses.

    while i don't mind the sales taxes applied to online purchases.. there must be some fucking uniformity. there's 1000s of tax jurisdictions, and different states tax different things, and some tax different things at different rates.

    until that is addressed, the status quo (seller's physical presence, and putting burden of reporting/paying taxes on out of state purchases on the buyer as is required by most) was a better way.

    1. Re:paperwork nightmare incoming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That was the first thing that occurred to me: what about eBay sellers?

      It's not eBay selling something, it's the individual person. Someone putting something up for auction has no idea who is going to end up buying it. If the individual seller is going to be responsible for collecting and remitting the tax to whatever authority exists in the location of the buyer, good luck figuring that one out.

      Will eBay help? They'd probably rather not, but if they don't have some method of letting a seller know what the taxes are, how can a seller remit the taxes owed? Will eBay make it part of their service, where they figure out the taxes and add it to the fees that are deducted from the sale prince? If they don't, good bye a holy hell of a lot of sellers in the U.S.

      If the non-store front eBay seller has to risk being prosecuted in some other state for tax evasion in order to get a few bucks for some trinkets, then I bet Goodwill is going to be seeing a lot more donations.

    2. Re: paperwork nightmare incoming by kenh · · Score: 1

      No, one tax rate per state, easy-peasy.

      Worst case, tax rate table per zip code.

      --
      Ken
    3. Re: paperwork nightmare incoming by sconeu · · Score: 1

      It's been said before... ZIP codes cross city and county lines, which do have different tax rates.

      Hell, some items have different tax rates depending on their SKU, etc... (see "candy tax") in some jurisdictions. It's not as simple as just indexing.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    4. Re:paperwork nightmare incoming by Quirkz · · Score: 1

      A simple answer would be that a state would just set a universal "online sales tax rate" and stick with it. Ideally one that's maybe slightly lower than their in-person sales tax, to make up for some things that would be exempted, such as food.

      Beyond that, I think it's clear this is only for the state tax, and not town, county, district, municipality, etc. All of those would be ignored.

    5. Re: paperwork nightmare incoming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, easy-peasy. No zip code would ever have multiple relevant tax rates, would they?

      Oops! Zip codes cross state lines in some cases. They cross county lines in more cases. Now you have multiple tax rates per zip code in some cases. So much for easy-peasy.

  13. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by jellomizer · · Score: 3, Insightful

    In general I am OK with states charging sales tax for online purchases. As Sales Tax takes advantages of both Progressive and Regressive taxing. Being that the Rich will in general buy more so they will be funding more to the government, while taking the simplicity of a fixed rate tax.
    Online Purchases still need to be shipped to the sates, thus needing to use its infrastructure to deliver them. So all in all in this day in age Taxing internet purchases is perfectly reasonable.

    However the argument that the tax revenue is hurting any particular initiative is more to blame on bad leadership, or misaligned priorities. If the state wants more money to Education, then they would find a way to fund it better. Even if it means cutting money on services it deems as lower priority, and the leadership will need to take the responsibility of saying that that service doesn't deserve the money over Education. Also their are other taxing methods that can be applied to help better fund thing, all at their own tradeoffs as well.

    Sales tax on internet is an easy win with low political repercussion. Because the extra cost of sales tax, isn't going to hurt the economy. because if they want the product and it is prices closer to a local store. They may want to go to the store to buy it and get the convince of getting it now, and returning it the same day. If it is a hard to find item in the area, you can still get it online, just for 5-10% more.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  14. "Use" tax, not sales tax by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

    States have no right to regulate interstate commerce.

    True, but I lived in the US for a while in Michigan and they had a campaign to get people to declare out of state purchases on their tax form so the state could collect the tax and so I asked my American colleagues how this was legal. Apparently the dodge they used was that this technically was not a sales tax but a "use" tax i.e. you had to pay in order to "use" the product in Michigan and the tax was not technically on the purchase. Slimy, but probably legal unless you can afford a very expensive legal team.

    1. Re: "Use" tax, not sales tax by DaHat · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Use taxes are very common... though not often paid.

      Here in WA we have places that have a 10% sales tax rate, and it is not uncommon for people to take a drive down to Portland for some big purchases, were there is no sales tax.

      Hell, a neighbor of mine used to have their cars registered there to avoid WA taxes.

    2. Re:"Use" tax, not sales tax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with a use tax is basically self reported. It would be a person saying, 'Yes, I bought these items with a value of $10,000, I'd like to pay $500 in owed taxes, please.". Of course, very few people are going to volunteer extra money to the tax collector. That why they want this instituted as a sales tax, happening at the point of sale. They do this in the Northeast, when you buy an item (not a car, those are different) of over $500 of value in a sales-tax-free state, the retailer helpfully collects the tax at the locality that you state are from and (supposedly) remit that tax to them.

      Maybe instead of saying, "Hey, collect this tax for us", they should be saying, "Please give us a list of addresses and purchase totals for the zip codes in our state." Then they should go after their constituents. It shouldn't be the company's responsibility to track down people that South Dakota considers tax dodgers. Should be fairly straightforward, South Dakota zip codes are 570xx and 572xx to 577xx.

      Also, some larger municipalities have additional taxes. What about specific county taxes? Do companies need to collect taxes for both of them? I suppose companies could go the easy route compute a combination of the highest state tax rate, the highest county tax rate, and the highest city tax rate, and just pass that all along to the consumer. Therefore, the price of the item will be variable based on where you live. You live on the coast, you pay the regular rate. You live in fly-over country, I'm sorry, you have to pay more for that item.

    3. Re: "Use" tax, not sales tax by kenh · · Score: 1

      True, but I lived in the US for a while in Michigan and they had a campaign to get people to declare out of state purchases on their tax form so the state could collect the tax

      That is typical, most states have such a requirement, and few, if any, taxpayers comply - of course, some states like Delaware have no sales tax.

      --
      Ken
    4. Re: "Use" tax, not sales tax by Ryanrule · · Score: 1

      Hope they were jailed for evasion

    5. Re: "Use" tax, not sales tax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That specific case is commonly misunderstood.

      If you live in a state that has a sales tax....
      and you drive to a state that does not have a sales tax...
      and you buy something....
      and you drive back to your state of residence, and use it there...

      You owe your state's sales tax to your state. Further, it is YOUR legal responsibility to report it to the state and pay it to the state. Failure to do this is a felony now that you are aware of the law (when ignorant of the law you still owe the money, plus interest and penalties etc., for all the past-due out-of-state purchases for your entire term of residence in that state).

      That's the law. Few know it, fewer follow it, and most hate it.

    6. Re: "Use" tax, not sales tax by Solandri · · Score: 1
      Many states are implementing use taxes illegally, or at least illogically.

      With a sales tax, the tax is on the amount of the sale. New or used.

      With a use tax, the tax is purported on the use the buyer gets out of the item. States try to call them use taxes to get around the prohibition on taxes on interstate commerce - a sales tax applies to the transaction, a use tax applies to where the item will be used. But many of them (e.g. California) also apply use taxes to sales of used items like cars. This is illogical, if not illegal. Say you bought a car for $30,000 and paid use taxes on $30,000, then sold the car for $20,000. Currently these states then charge the buyer use taxes on the $20,000 used car. But the correct (logical) way to implement it would be they charge the buyer use taxes on $20,000, then reimburse you for use taxes on $20,000 since you only "used" $10,000 of value from the car ($30,000 to $20,000).

      This creates a logical inconsistency where one vehicle bought for $30,000 and used for 10 years can result in $3,000 use tax revenue (10%). While another identical vehicle also sold for $30,000 and also used for 10 years can result in $8,000 use tax revenue.
      • $3,000 use tax revenue on initial sale
      • $2,000 use tax revenue when it's sold 2 years later for $20,000
      • $1,500 use tax revenue when it's sold 2 years later for $15,000
      • $1,000 use tax revenue when it's sold 2 years later for $10,000
      • $500 use tax revenue when it's sold 2 years later for $5,000.

      If your state assesses a use tax on used items and doesn't reimburse the previous owner for unused value, then it's not a use tax, it's a sales tax.

    7. Re: "Use" tax, not sales tax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, states prefer that commercial firms abuse their citizens so as to redirect the blame......

      Enforcing use tax collection on taxpayers might just make them rethink who should be in office....

    8. Re: "Use" tax, not sales tax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Many states are implementing use taxes illegally, or at least illogically.

      You are criticizing use taxes illogically. The only way your straw man assertions make sense is by relying on your false definitions.

      With a sales tax, the tax is on the amount of the sale. New or used.

      Nope. First, some states have exemptions on used items, and there are rules for assessed value that can apply.

      With a use tax, the tax is purported on the use the buyer gets out of the item. States try to call them use taxes to get around the prohibition on taxes on interstate commerce.

      There is no prohibition on taxes on interstate commerce. There is a constitutional requirement that taxes not differentiate between in-state and out-of-state, but your assertion is false. That's why Amazon has been collecting taxes and why Quill only ruled on the physical nexus issue, it did not ban taxes.

      Use taxes would not substitute if there was such an actual ban, and so your whole post is just useless blather that isn't even technically correct. You really know less than you think. Here's a hint: Vehicle taxes do account for used ones and value changes. Details vary though.

    9. Re:"Use" tax, not sales tax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's typically illegal to collect more sales tax than owed.

      So if you collect 9.75% when the rate was actually 9.25%, you just committed a crime.

    10. Re: "Use" tax, not sales tax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Use taxes are very common... though not often paid.

      Here in WA we have places that have a 10% sales tax rate, and it is not uncommon for people to take a drive down to Portland for some big purchases, were there is no sales tax.

      Use taxes are - and always have been - a Bill of Rights violation. They violate a number of fundamental rights retained by the people under the 9th Amendment, and reserved to the people under the 10th Amendment.

      In a free country, no government can subject people to excessive bureaucracy. This is both an universal and inalienable right in it's own regard, and a consequence of the right to ethical practice of law. Legal professionals serve as intermediaries in situation where people don't want their time wasted, especially when they have to interact with bureaucracies - and hence creation of unnecessary bureaucracy creates an artificial demand for the services of lawyers (as well as other special interest groups in a position to make campaign contributions) - anything that reduces people's free time or creates a hassle will make them all that more likely to value what they have left, thus creating a demand for lawyers even if they aren't being directly hired for a specific instance of excessive bureaucracy.

      But even the appearance of conflict of interest must be avoided to be complaint with the right to ethical practice of law (not to mention the right to ethical government).

      As such, individuals can NOT be required to keep track of their purchases - and whether or not sales tax was paid at the time of purchase - and whether or not additional tax is owed - and whether or not that additional tax subtracts the original tax.

      As use tax laws require such tracking, they are illegal. In this day and age, for individuals to track purchases requires keeping a ridiculous amount of information, given the number of Internet purchases the average person makes in a year.

      It follows that enforcement of use tax laws is an infringement of fundamental rights "under the colour of law" and hence a criminal offence under long standing federal law, as well as being grounds for civil suit.

      This, of course, is why the vast majority (98-99%) of people are refusing to pay use taxes. That's far beyond ANY reasonable minimum or other criteria that could be used to determine when a right "retained by the people" is in play, and hence the actions of government are illegal and criminal. The USA has an open-ended Bill of Rights, and part of the job of a competent government is keeping track of any rights the people might choose to assert. It's not like we're talking about obscure rights in this situation either - the right to ethical government, the right to ethical practice of law, and other rights a reasonable would expect to have in a free country - these are pretty fundamental.

      In short, this is one of those many situations in which a law written on the books is in fact an illegal law - and a competent government would be fully aware of that fact and would have fixed the situation a long time ago.

      A competent government would maintain the law code, removing these problem laws, much like a competent software vendor maintains the software products they sell. But that assumes competence (and perhaps integrity as well) - which appear all too rare in government. Why would a politician whose only concern is getting re-elected care about actually doing his or her job? And why would a judge whose only concern is selection to higher office (or keeping the politicians happy who vote on his salary) do anything to rock the boat? And - as we saw with the recent Kansas police shooting - we can't count on prosecutors to actually do their jobs.

      In short, even assuming the absence of blackmail material on people selected for high office (a dubious assumption), there is just not a whole lot of reason to expect either competence or integrity from government.

      It's an ugly situation - and a massive problem in legal and governmental

  15. Reshipping? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What if I get a POBox in Oregon, and have a company "reship" things to my real address? On high value items this could easily be much cheaper than paying sales taxes.

    1. Re: Reshipping? by Binkleyz · · Score: 2

      Unless you're reshipping high value items with a super cheap carrier and no insurance, I wonder if the economics of that works out..

    2. Re:Reshipping? by iTrawl · · Score: 1

      You store and ship your property wherever you want man.

      --
      "Everybody's naked underneath" -- The Doctor
    3. Re: Reshipping? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apparently companies already exist for reshipping, such as AmForward, and ViaBox. You pay a processing fee, and a shipping fee, but it could be cheaper than paying the local taxes. Since those companies are based out of Oregon, you'd pay no state taxes.

      For very small high value shipments like expensive computer parts, it probably be cheaper than most state taxes.

    4. Re:Reshipping? by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Service already exists. IIRC mostly used by Australians, to avoid their government theft.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    5. Re: Reshipping? by kenh · · Score: 1

      So you expect someone to open a business that ships you items for a fee to avoid the sales tax in your state? Why isn't the 'reshipper' considered a business and your state would expect tax revenue from them?

      Also, gov't take a dim view of citizens that actively work to avoid paying their tax obligations.

      Why don't you want to pay 'your fair share' of taxes to fund police, fire, education, etc?

      --
      Ken
    6. Re: Reshipping? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why don't you want to pay 'your fair share' of taxes to fund police, fire, education, etc?

      You're so precious to think taxes don't mostly go into the pockets of politicians and their cronies.

    7. Re: Reshipping? by Binkleyz · · Score: 1

      Hmm.. ok, and since I live literally three minutes from Delaware, I guess I could just get a PO box or something..

    8. Re: Reshipping? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Police, fire, education are usually paid by property taxes, not sales taxes.

  16. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by msauve · · Score: 1

    "You'll, of course, make it illegal to use this money for anything else, right?"

    What difference would that make? It's a zero-sum game. They'd just reduce education expenditures from the general fund to offset.

    --
    "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
  17. Enforcement? by Binkleyz · · Score: 1

    Just wondering how this is enforceable. What mechanism under civil law would allow the state of South Dakota to bring an enforcement action against a resident of, say, Pennsylvania? Please forgive if this is obvious, IANAL.

    1. Re:Enforcement? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you have this backwards. South Dakota would bring an enforcement action against a business in, say, Pennsylvania for not collecting sales tax on a sale to a resident of South Dakota.

    2. Re:Enforcement? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They will go after the buyer and by picking some arbitrary retailer that will be forced to report all transactions. They will make an example of some poor sucker. Remember every April 15 you consent to income taxes and calculate your own bill.

    3. Re:Enforcement? by JustOK · · Score: 1

      Same as what allows them to charge the sales tax if you buy in person.

      --
      rewriting history since 2109
    4. Re:Enforcement? by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      armed state police enter businesses to physically force them to collect the sales tax; I guess in this case the states have a common interest in collecting sales tax for each other, but the states that don't have a sales tax could be a safe haven from violence

    5. Re:Enforcement? by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      Or they just send a stern letter.

      Calm down.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    6. Re: Enforcement? by Binkleyz · · Score: 1

      You're right, of course.. what I meant to ask was how can SD enforce its tax laws on a business that is resident in a different state? It's not like they're able to extradite over a civil issue..

    7. Re:Enforcement? by Agripa · · Score: 1

      I think you have this backwards. South Dakota would bring an enforcement action against a business in, say, Pennsylvania for not collecting sales tax on a sale to a resident of South Dakota.

      Federal marshals with guns.

  18. I see it now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Make a cart in Amazon, get a cart ID number. Call the phone number and punch in the cart ID, they already have your CC and your shipping preference.

    They can patent it as one-call ordering!

    1. Re:I see it now by lsllll · · Score: 1

      Jeff? Is that you?

      --
      Is that a roll of dimes in your pocket or are you happy to see me?
  19. What the Commerce Clause actually says by sjbe · · Score: 1

    States have no right to regulate interstate commerce.

    That is NOT what the Commerce Cause of the Constitution says. It says [The Congress shall have Power] To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes. This wording does not prohibit States from having regulations regarding interstate commerce, it just means that Federal laws regarding commerce shall prevail in the event of a dispute. How this clause is to be interpreted has been the subject of debate since the founding of the republic but there is quite a lot of wiggle room here.

    This is not something that the supreme court should even have the power to decide.

    This is EXACTLY the sort of thing the Supreme Court has the power to decide. The entire job of the Supreme Court is to interpret whether a dispute about the law is constitutional or not and how the law should be interpreted with respect to the Constitution.

    1. Re:What the Commerce Clause actually says by omnichad · · Score: 1

      This wording does not prohibit States from having regulations regarding interstate commerce

      While true on a technical level alone, does every state have to create a treaty with every other state in order to start expecting a tax? Otherwise, sellers in other states are outside of their jurisdiction (which this court refused to recognize in order to push an agenda). Are the states going to close their borders to open trade in response?

    2. Re:What the Commerce Clause actually says by apoc.famine · · Score: 1

      does every state have to create a treaty with every other state in order to start expecting a tax?

      If that's the case, we're probably going to have to send a representative from every state to meet together and work out the details. I wonder how that sort of system would work?

      --
      Velociraptor = Distiraptor / Timeraptor
    3. Re:What the Commerce Clause actually says by omnichad · · Score: 1

      Well...they'd probably get together and write a Constitution....and then realize they got this whole thing backwards.

    4. Re:What the Commerce Clause actually says by superdave80 · · Score: 1

      So a sentence that specifically states that congress shall have the power to regulate commerce between the states... means that the states have the power to regulate commerce between the states?

    5. Re:What the Commerce Clause actually says by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So a sentence that specifically states that congress shall have the power to regulate commerce between the states... means that the states have the power to regulate commerce between the states?

      Yes.

      Welcome to Remedial English 101, US Government-style.

  20. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, it will go to Teacher Unions to fund the next "my turn" candidates doomed White House run. I'm not supporting the GOP here, just upset that Democrats erected the stupid "super-delegates" and rigged primary election process.

  21. Originalism by sjbe · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Remember this the next time Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch or Clarence Thomas talk about the following the original text of the constitution.

    Heh... Yes this is a solid example of why originalists are so full of shit. It's almost always an excuse to justify some sort of behavior that is abhorrent under current social norms or to try stem the tide of political change that some people (usually conservatives) disapprove of. Originalists tend to ignore this principle when it is convenient for them but shout loudly about it when it helps whatever cause they are pushing at the time.

    In this case internet commerce has changed the game dramatically and the laws were written in an earlier era with different circumstances. I haven't looked closely enough at this case to decide whether I agree with the decision but it seems clear enough that the old understanding regarding sales tax collection between states no longer makes much sense in the internet era. Change has to happen one way or another so such a decision isn't surprising even if it ultimately turns out to be a poor one. Maybe this will force Congress to actually address the elephant in the room and establish a new framework for States to collect sales tax that makes sense. (Dare to dream...)

    1. Re:Originalism by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

      Did the internet change things, or the telephone? I also haven't read the text, but I never understood why internet orders are any different from telephone catalog orders.

    2. Re:Originalism by edtice1559 · · Score: 1

      They're not from a technological perspective. But the volume of internet commerce is orders of magnitude larger then catalog/phone orders!

    3. Re:Originalism by ScentCone · · Score: 3, Informative

      Which should have exactly ZERO bearing on the constitutional issues involved. The government doesn't get infringe on your right to speak, or assemble, or defend yourself - and not only when you only do it a little, or a lot. Those principles are one size fits all. Phoning, faxing, driving, mailing, or app-submitting an order to a retailer should have nothing whatsoever to do with whether that business is obligated to act as an agent of an out of state government where the business's owners don't even have a vote.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    4. Re:Originalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *One Nation, under God*!

      I don't get to vote for the California senator that writes laws for all of us to obey either, yet a lot of my tax dollars go to them anyway.

    5. Re:Originalism by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      But you have elected representatives that can face that CA legislator in the house or senate and speak (and vote) on your behalf. You do NOT have anyone representing you some other state house as that state sets up it's own rules for sales taxation that suddenly YOU are obliged to collect for them in your own state.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    6. Re:Originalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Basically I'm with you on this, but we need the feds to keep one state from fucking over the others. Obviously that's not working. Oh well, it's all the voters' fault anyway. They keep on reelecting the most corrupt into office, hoping to get a piece of the action, more handouts and phony tax cuts is what they are looking for. Plato said, and I agree, majority rule sucks.

    7. Re:Originalism by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      Which should have exactly

      Should ? The whole idea of taxes is practicality winning over "should". What "should" be the tax rate applicable to a Texan buying a $7 sandwich from a Californian in Georgia while wearing a red shirt at 70 degree F temperature while it is not raining outside but slightly cloudy at evening 6 pm ?

      And how many would agree with this tax rate that you say "should" apply ?

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    8. Re:Originalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So they don't like stuff you like, so they're full of shit. but when they agree with you, they're also full of shit. got it.
      I bet you're fun to be around.

  22. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by pr0fessor · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The only problem I see with the state taxing online purchases is that small online retailers will have extra overhead to meet tax requirements for all states.

  23. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by saloomy · · Score: 1

    The problem here is if you are a three employee retailer with a small online presence, states and counties and cities have their own taxes, and you have to determine the applicable rate for every combination. Also, what happens when you order from international shippers, who don't hold dollars or have accounts with the state?

  24. All this whining about NOTHING! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can you really remember the last time you bought something online and weren't charged sales tax? I can't.

    1. Re:All this whining about NOTHING! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yes but it was for something that isn't taxed in my area. (coffee)

    2. Re:All this whining about NOTHING! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, it was last week.

    3. Re:All this whining about NOTHING! by Ada_Rules · · Score: 1

      Can you really remember the last time you bought something online and weren't charged sales tax? I can't.

      I never pay sales tax online.

      --
      --- Liberty in our Lifetime
  25. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

    By that standard every flat tax is "progressive" since the rich always pay more of every tax, but this Amazon tax will mainly be paid by the lower classes. Collections at Soetheby's will not increase

  26. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by jellomizer · · Score: 1

    That is an easy technology fix. Sorry. A simple table with Zipcode and Taxrate.
    You add the tax to your final total. Then pay the states the tax.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  27. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's even more complicated than that - different classes of items may be exempt or taxed at different rates. And these things are constantly changing, sometimes only temporarily (sales tax holidays). Either you're going to need a department to manage all of this or you'll have to contract with an outside tax firm. Or limit your online sales to states without sales tax.

  28. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by plague911 · · Score: 1, Informative

    Sales taxes distort markets, income taxes do not.

    For a 10% income tax If a product costs $9.50 to make and can be sold for $10.00 the transaction will occur a profit of $.50 will be generated which can then be taxes for $.05.

    For a 10% sales tax. If a product costs $9.50 to make and can be sold for $10.00, the tax will be $1.00 and revenue only $9.00. As such the transaction will not occur

    You ask. Cant we just lower the sales tax to %.5? Sure, however, given the large variety of margins generated in the whole of the market, it is impossibly impractical to customize sales taxes so they do not create these market distortions.

    Purely looking at market dynamics, all sales taxes should be abolished and replaced by income taxes. It would increase market efficiency substantially.

  29. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's not nearly that simple.

    There is an area in Illinois (around Chicago + some) where a Snickers bar gets taxed less than a package of Starbust, because anything that contains flour does not qualify for the "candy" tax. There are strange laws on sales taxes in many municipalities all across the country. Don't think for a second that they don't expect those to all be followed to the letter.

    This ruling makes collecting sales taxes in America just as complicated as managing tariffs for international shipments. Hopefully minus most of the corruption.

  30. How is this mechanically possible? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If I sell things to people in South Dakota and then don't pay SD sales tax, what can they do about it? I'm probably never going to set foot in SD for the rest of my life anyway. Do they extradite? Use federal (?) powers to seize my credit union account in another state?

  31. This is so very bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not a problem that an online business collects taxes. That's easy.

    The problem is keeping track of the taxes for every tax area in the world and paying them. You may only have one sale to a given location and have to pay to three separate entities in that location (State, County, City). If you have 20 cents to pay a city and it costs you 20 dollars, that's a fail! Keeping track of it is going to be a nightmare that will only be solved by paying yet another business (one that keeps track of the tax rates and disburses the tax for you).

    Yeah... I know. The article is about states collecting. The rest of them aren't going to give up on that income stream. If it's not implied by the current ruling, it certainly will be in short enough time.

    It also drains away privacy. It's going to get where you need to report the exact address of every transaction. The state, county, and city is going to know where you bought *whatever* from. :-)

  32. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by HornWumpus · · Score: 2

    Bzzzt.

    Zip code does not translate into tax rate.

    You need complete address information, there are websites that do it as a web service.

    But more realistically, 3 person company can safely ignore any other states tax authority. The worst that will happen is a harshly worded letter, which can be ignored. Just make sure it's incorporated, or owners are liable to get a surprise when on vacation.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  33. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

    "You'll, of course, make it illegal to use this money for anything else, right?"

    What difference would that make? It's a zero-sum game.

    Indeed. Money is fungible. Taxes targeted for specific spending priorities are just a way to dupe voters into accepting stupid taxes. Like lotteries targeted for education. So do states with lotteries spend more on education? Of course not.

  34. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  35. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry, the zip code has no relationship to the tax rate. I am leasing a car and the tax rate changed three times last year.

    Disney World in Florida has at least two tax rates.

  36. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by apoc.famine · · Score: 1

    Yeah! Super easy! Only 42,000 zip codes to keep track of! And setting an update schedule and mechanism and determining who is responsible for the update. And if you're relying on someone in each zipcode to make sure that their's is accurate, you'll need some method of authenticating people who can make that change. And then there's collecting address/payee info about where to send the tax for each one. And dispute resolution. And you'll probably need to keep track of what you sell as well, because some zip codes will be allocating the tax from one type of item (soda taxes, e.g.) differently than others.

    And that needs to be implemented correctly by every online business with a presence in the US.

    --
    Velociraptor = Distiraptor / Timeraptor
  37. Re:The RICH don't pay their share. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The Rich cheat by sending empty boxes to their home in a sales tax free state. Famous New York jeweler admitted to sending empty boxes to the clients home while they walked out with the $100,000 ring.

    It also happens in the big art auctions. Buy the $100,000,000 painting for my "tax free state home" but keep it in New York city.

  38. Potential mess by sjbe · · Score: 1

    While true on a technical level alone, does every state have to create a treaty with every other state in order to start expecting a tax?

    Perhaps (yikes). That's why Congress might have to actually get off their ass and do something about the problem. I'm an accountant and this definitely has the potential to be a very expensive and complicated mess. There are ways to solve the problem but the best ones involve Congress not being a bunch of asshats only concerned with political infighting.

    Are the states going to close their borders to open trade in response?

    No they just have a lawsuit in federal court just like they do now. But this could really swamp the courts with needless litigation which is an obvious problem.

    1. Re:Potential mess by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      There are ways to solve the problem but the best ones involve Congress not being a bunch of asshats only concerned with political infighting.

      Whahahahaha. Gasp. SNORT. Cough. Wheeze.

      You must be new here.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    2. Re:Potential mess by ememisya · · Score: 1
  39. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Technically if you order from an international store you're importing it. In Canada packages over $20 can be assessed taxes by customs at the border.

  40. Not so fast by mysidia · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They have not ruled that states can require online retailers to collect sales tax in general. They have overturned the argument that there is no nexus because of No Physical Presence, and Nexus can be established in other ways for large National retailers such as Quill or Amazon, for example. The court ruled there --- This quantity of business could not have occurred unless the seller availed itself of the substantial privilege of carrying on business in South Dakota.
    And respondents are large, national companies that undoubtedly maintain an extensive virtual presence. Thus, the substantial nexus requirement of Complete Auto is satisfied in this case

     

    The question remains whether some other principle in
    the Court’s Commerce Clause doctrine might invalidate
    the Act. Because the Quill physical presence rule was an
    obvious barrier to the Act’s validity, these issues have not
    yet been litigated or briefed, and so the Court need not
    resolve them here. That said, South Dakota’s tax system
    includes several features that appear designed to prevent
    discrimination against or undue burdens upon interstate
    commerce. First, the Act applies a safe harbor to those
    who transact only limited business in South Dakota.

    1. Re:Not so fast by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sush.... reading the ruling is against the rules.

  41. The end result by bobstreo · · Score: 1

    will be companies moving to states with little or no sales tax.

    Anyone looking for a new idea to make money should start working on sales tax software for small businesses.

    1. Re:The end result by suutar · · Score: 1

      As far as I can tell, the point of this is that it doesn't matter where the company is, it matters where the purchasers are. What does moving get the company?

  42. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by superdave80 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    You will also need a table that lists every item to determine if it is taxable or not. Every 'item' is not taxed the same in every state/county/city. This table is going to get really, really big...

  43. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not easy at all.
    Zip code span taxing areas. Must use real address. New homes added daily, what tax area are they in?

    Each taxing area has different rules and Categories/Quantities for the same product.
    1 muffin may be taxed at 7%, a dozen is 0%.
    Cooked ribs taxed at 6% if freshly cooked, if frozen after cooking no tax. And so on.

    Each taxing area may have tax holidays. Must maintain a list of items/dates. School supplies no tax Jul 5-7 in one area.
    Online system must track tax area then track which each product (what are school supplies anyways, each area has a different vague list) for tax holidays.

    In each area you must apply for a sales tax license (maybe multiple licenses based on what you sell), then every month do paperwork/online and fill in your monthly results even if you have no sales. Almost a full time job if you sell in all 50 states.

    If people get anything wrong they can now be charged with a crime/penalties in a state they have never been too. Charged the wrong rate, go to jail, customer sues you, and/or big fines for tax evasion.

    The supreme court is technically correct, but small business will be wiped from the internet in the US it is just too costly to comply with all the taxing districts. Doubtful congress will do anything as big business already complies and will gain from this ruling to wipe out the small guys.

  44. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not supporting the GOP here, just upset that Democrats erected the stupid "super-delegates" and rigged primary election process.

    Why? The whole election process has been a sham since the beginning, the latest farce only differs from the smoke-filled backrooms in that occasionally there are fools that believe it meant anything.

    You are like the idiot complaining that your car is getting smoke damage when the whole garage is caught in a conflagration.

  45. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by GLMDesigns · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Please give me examples of this?

    As an atheist I hate any forced religion. Oh. You mean any criticisms of Islam?

    The next worldwide human rights issue will be being able to leave your religion (apostasy) without fear of death. The UN's resolution has been vetoes by Islamic states since the 1980s.

    The GOP hates blacks and asians? You mean you haven't heard of

    Nicki Halley, two term SC governor and current UN representative?
    Bobby Jindal, two term LA governor
    Susana Martinez, two term NM governor
    Brian Sandoval, NV governor
    Marco Rubio, FL Senator
    Ted Cruz, TX Senator
    Tim Scott, SC Senator

    and many others too long to list?

    Re conservative? Of course the GOP backs social conservatives, free market types, libertarians, etc... the same way that the Democratic Party supports labor and progressive types. Duhhh. What else is a political party supposed to do?

    --
    If you're scared of your govt then you need to further restrict its powers
    Vote 3rd Party in 2016 and beyond
  46. The real cost of this to small business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I sell on Ebay, amazon, and a few other market places. The real cost is not the tax that we collect. That will be passed on to the customer. The real cost is trying to figure out what tax each order is. We are based in the state of Washington. When we sell to somebody in this state we must add on the taxes. But there are city, municipality, and county taxes. There is a web API we can pass in the address and get the result, but it is buggy. The API keeps changing and it is down half the time. Also customers don't always supply a correct address. Now multiply that by 50. Every state will have its own system for figuring out the tax. If you are Amazon you can put a team to solve it. But for my business there is just me. The real cost is the overhead needed to do the right thing.

  47. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Some states have multiple classes of items and I'd bet none of those classes are exactly the same. So now your simple table is now multiple tables to handle every possible item-state-tax class combination. And they all have to be kept up to date to track the constant changes in sales tax rates in all 50 states.

    How often do the taxes need to be sent to each state? Are the records that need to be kept consistent across all states? How many states have fully automated ways to pay the tax and how many require cutting an actual check? If someone from South Dakota is buying something in Minnesota to be shipped directly to their friend in North Dakota, which tax do they pay? What if North Dakota passes a law that says since it's being shipped to ND, ND tax needs to be paid while SD passes a law that since the billing address is in SD, SD tax needs to be paid?

    And now your simple single table is an entire division of your company with a couple certified accountants, a lawyer or three, a DBA and a development team to transform this quagmire of business logic into workable code.

  48. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by magzteel · · Score: 1

    By that standard every flat tax is "progressive" since the rich always pay more of every tax, but this Amazon tax will mainly be paid by the lower classes. Collections at Soetheby's will not increase

    Amazon has been collecting sales taxes in all states for over a year
    http://money.cnn.com/2017/03/2...

  49. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Dragonslicer · · Score: 3, Interesting

    And that needs to be implemented correctly by every online business with a presence in the US.

    Not necessarily. I'm fine with a state being able to collect sales tax on online purchases, but it's the state's responsibility to provide a simple mechanism that the seller can use to determine what the sales tax should be. A different API for different states would explicitly be considered not simple. There would have to be something like a web service hosted by e.g. the FTC, where the seller just submits address and item name/description and gets back the tax rate. If the state can't provide the necessary information, then they'll have to simplify their tax code before they can collect sales tax from online purchases.

  50. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by techguymatt · · Score: 1

    The problem here is if you are a three employee retailer with a small online presence, states and counties and cities have their own taxes, and you have to determine the applicable rate for every combination. Also, what happens when you order from international shippers, who don't hold dollars or have accounts with the state?

    This is a solved problem. I wrote an integration with Avatax (one of many competitors in this field), in about 4 hours, fully tested.

  51. The End of Small Business on the Internet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No more little shops setting up a web site and selling things. They won't be able to afford the paperwork of keeping up with 2000+ tax regions. This thoroughly entrenches Amazon and the like as gatekeepers of Internet commerce. Want to sell your widgets across the country, pay the toll to the gatekeepers.

  52. Doesn't affect Amazon by magzteel · · Score: 2

    They have been collecting sales taxes in every state for over a year.
    http://money.cnn.com/2017/03/2...

    Amazon already offers sales tax calculation services to marketplace sellers
    https://sellercentral.amazon.c...

    Bet they offer it to external ones too soon

    1. Re:Doesn't affect Amazon by oldgraybeard · · Score: 1

      Amazon is loving this. They want as many of the independent online retailers to shut their independent stores and move to an Amazon store. Amazon skims the top 8-15% of the invoice total as it's share for having a store on Amazon. This comes right out of the sellers profit margin. Now if selling on Amazon gets the volume up for the 3rd party seller this can work out.
      Amazon also plays other games and has other charges. Their product management interface sucks. But it is, what it is. They are calling all the shots ATM.

    2. Re:Doesn't affect Amazon by magzteel · · Score: 1

      Amazon is loving this. They want as many of the independent online retailers to shut their independent stores and move to an Amazon store. Amazon skims the top 8-15% of the invoice total as it's share for having a store on Amazon. This comes right out of the sellers profit margin. Now if selling on Amazon gets the volume up for the 3rd party seller this can work out.
      Amazon also plays other games and has other charges. Their product management interface sucks. But it is, what it is. They are calling all the shots ATM.

      I found it amusing that some comments posted were about how Amazon could avoid this tax by playing phone order games.
      Makes no sense at all.

      I didn't read the ruling. It would be good if the ruling included a requirement that the various tax jurisdictions that wanted to receive this tax revenue had to define their tax policy in some standard federal service that was freely available to merchants. A merchant could call something like calculateTaxes(zipCode, Collection, transactionId) and get back the taxes to collect, if any. Service would have to keep an audit trail of requests and responses in case the merchant was audited. Service could be financed by a cut of the revenues collected. No doubt this is an extreme simplification but I'm sure it's doable.

    3. Re:Doesn't affect Amazon by oldgraybeard · · Score: 1

      A centralized system/rules is what would make sense. But as far as I know those efforts failed. No one wanted to give up their special issues. In order to simplify things. So the taxing entities and buyers(who are required to self report in most places but never do) are just dropping the whole issue on the online seller. Heck I bet few ebay sellers are dealing with sales tax either. You know ebay could be in for problems.

    4. Re:Doesn't affect Amazon by Agripa · · Score: 1

      Amazon already offers sales tax calculation services to marketplace sellers

      That will be very comforting to people and companies that Amazon declines to do business with.

    5. Re:Doesn't affect Amazon by Agripa · · Score: 1

      I would be satisfied if the states which wanted to collect tax from sellers were required to entirely at their own expense maintain an online database which immediately returned the tax based on item and address and any mistakes resulted in a minimum of triple damages based on price for the seller.

      Also, keeping any permanent record by the state should be a criminal offense.

  53. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by kenh · · Score: 1

    I don't recall seeing a single person trying to talk the voters out of it who wasn't a Democrat.

    Christ, I need graph paper to figure that sentence out.

    --
    Ken
  54. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by SlaveToTheGrind · · Score: 4, Informative

    The only problem I see with the state taxing online purchases is that small online retailers will have extra overhead to meet tax requirements for all states.

    The South Dakota statute in question only required collection/remittance of South Dakota sales tax if the online retailer had more than $100k in sales in South Dakota and/or more than 200 annual transactions in South Dakota. The Supreme Court specifically discussed those thresholds in its analysis, which will be a signal to other states that if they follow suit, they'll need to have some sort of reasonable minimum threshold as well. It would be hard for a truly small retailer to exceed that threshold in a single state in the first place, and then if they did it would only apply to transactions in that state.

  55. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

    So long as the "patchwork problem" can be handled by standard, easy to use software, it should not add appreciably to even a small retailer's costs. Just don't make them handle any tax differential that affects an area smaller than one zipcode.

  56. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by techguymatt · · Score: 1

    That is an easy technology fix. Sorry. A simple table with Zipcode and Taxrate. You add the tax to your final total. Then pay the states the tax.

    This is wrong. Well, not all wrong, but the only correct part of this is that it is an easy technology fix. That technology is an API call to a tax calculation service (there are many of these).

    Zipcode/Taxrate table is woefully oversimplified to the problem at hand. Zip codes cross county/city lines frequently, which each have their own general sales tax rates. Additionally, there are tax rates by product classification. Prepared food will be taxed differently than unprepared, a diamond ring will be taxed as a luxury good, there are tax holidays where anything classified a "school supply" has no sales tax, but only for a certain day, or set of days. Do not write your own sales tax calculations. There are services available to calculate it for free, and pay options for services that will file taxes for you.

  57. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by kenh · · Score: 1

    Applying that logic, every dollar spent on police, fire departments, roadway construction, parks, sewage, water, etc, etc is lost money that could have gone towards education - think of the children!

    --
    Ken
  58. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by techguymatt · · Score: 2

    But more realistically, 3 person company can safely ignore any other states tax authority. The worst that will happen is a harshly worded letter, which can be ignored. Just make sure it's incorporated, or owners are liable to get a surprise when on vacation.

    This is false. Do this at your own risk.

  59. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    lol, someone has looked at taxes.

    Add to that:

    Here, that bottle of sterile water for injection is taxed if sold to a vet, but not a human doctor. So now you have to deal with WHO you sell it to as well as where
    Some medical items they seem to think one is going to tax PART of the item cause SOME components are not taxable (3000 item tax table for ID+WA and I never did solve that one!) That tax table only covered the 375 or so codes for WA + ID.

    Plus all the things that are taxable here but not in next state and vice-versa. ID taxed food but not a wrist splint. WA taxes the wrist splint but not the food :O

    I assume someone sells a plugin to Quickbooks for sales tax like this and pays off Intuit so QB does NOT get the ability to do taxes correctly. Intuit explains how/why they charge YOU sales tax to buy QB but it does NOT let you do it correctly by ship-to address from within QB!

  60. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by hipp5 · · Score: 1

    The only problem I see with the state taxing online purchases is that small online retailers will have extra overhead to meet tax requirements for all states.

    Seems like a pretty good business opportunity to sell an automated tax system to small online businesses.

  61. The fantasy of targeted tax revenues by kenh · · Score: 4, Insightful

    When politicians designate new tax revenues as going towards some worthy cause (lottery profits for education, for example), rather than increasing the money spent on education, the lottery money instead offsets other tax revenues, freeing them up to be spent on politicians pet projects.

    If the lottery generates $20M for education, the net result is that $20M in lottery money takes the place of $20M that used to come from property taxes.

    Politicians expect you to think that the new revenue is in addition to what was already being spent, but it isn't.

    --
    Ken
  62. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by suutar · · Score: 1

    a three employee company is unlikely to be doing enough business to meet SD's thresholds, and since the SC talked about those thresholds it's not very likely for other states to impose a rule that doesn't have any thresholds.

    Also, it seems unlikely that a state law is going to worry overmuch about sub-state regional taxes; they just want the state-level cut.

  63. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by torkus · · Score: 1

    42,000?

    Like, forty two THOUSAND? OMG. That would take a team of 5-10 people a few WEEKS to comb through and organize. Think of all the ledge paper and pencils that will go to waste. Especially when they need to update or change something! Horrific!

    Now fast forward 50 years to today when mapping apps can reliably tell you not only every street name in the country (and much of the world) but the speed limit on them as well.

    Or the parking rules in NYC which vary by the time, day and even portion of the block you're on.

    And so on.

    And considering states have direct financial motivation to have this data accurate and available, I don't expect it would be that difficult to implement, or use.

    --
    You can get rich if you own a politician, but you have to be rich to buy one in the first place.
  64. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by CWCheese · · Score: 2
    Throughout recent history (last 40 years) there have been a cavalcade of revenue for education initiatives in the US states which invariably end up with the new revenues being raised and then an equal or greater amount (to the new revenue) is subtly drained from the education budget to fund other political whims. The biggest offenders are the state controlled lottery proceeds that are always said to benefit education. Now comes another sales tax for education, which likely won't be what is advertised.

    I really can't find fault in collecting sales tax across the internet for ecommerce, now that commerce is the major function of the internet and is no longer needing the protection from taxation. There are numerous services that can provide tax calculation and payment on behalf of small companies; not everyone needs to build their own tax engine.

    --
    Have a Day!
  65. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by apoc.famine · · Score: 1

    Man, I wish we had some mechanism for the states to work this out together instead of doing this way. Seems rather complicated, doesn't it?

    --
    Velociraptor = Distiraptor / Timeraptor
  66. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by CWCheese · · Score: 1

    These already exist, it's just a matter of providing it at a cost that isn't onerous to the small businessman

    --
    Have a Day!
  67. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Everyone else seems to be handling the "it's not that simple to figure out what to pay" piece, so instead I'll ask, who do I pay? Do I need to write out up to 50 checks every month to send out to the various treasuries of each state? Or do some states have multiple offices to handle the different local taxing jurisdictions within the state, and I need to make sure I send it out to the correct office, in which case the number of checks I am writing skyrockets beyond 50? And is it by month, or do I need to pay each taxing jurisdiction by week, or worse, daily? Or even worse still are some jurisdictions monthly and others weekly and the monthly ones will bitch at you if you try to send them anything weekly?

    As a consumer I have no problems with the existence of an internet sales tax. But this is the absolute worst way of implementing one.

  68. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

    Great! Where's the repository so we can download your code?

    --
    Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
  69. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    GOP hates poor Asians and blacks. If youâ(TM)re rich then thereâ(TM)s no issue.

  70. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not just fragmentation based on destination; the dissent mentioned how Illinois taxes Twix vs Snickers differently. There is overhead in putting your products into those fine grained categories even if your tax software understands them.

  71. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by torkus · · Score: 1

    Your example is full of holes.

    For one, sales tax is added to the price, not included in it, in the US. And since this article refers to US taxation and the US supreme court that seems pretty relevant.

    Also you're confusing corporate income tax with personal income tax and then trying to compare with sales tax. At least make the comparison apples to oranges, not apples to sneakers. You need to look at the macro picture including personal tax, corporate tax, sales tax and how it all impacts spending power/corporate revenue/taxation income.

    --
    You can get rich if you own a politician, but you have to be rich to buy one in the first place.
  72. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 2

    The South Dakota statute in question only required collection/remittance of South Dakota sales tax if the online retailer had more than $100k in sales in South Dakota and/or more than 200 annual transactions in South Dakota.

    Which means that an online retailer will have to be able to prove he/she/it doesn't meet those minimums anytime the government of South Dakota requires them to. It'll be interesting to see the reaction the first time the State of South Dakota audits a resident of, say, Maine....

    --

    "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
  73. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by gmack · · Score: 1

    Does a candy tax fit the court's definition of a sales tax?

  74. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

    Apologies in advance for replying to myself.

    It'll also be interesting the first time someone in Maine says to a customer, "I'll have to delay delivery of your order by three weeks so I don't hit the 200 annual transactions limit for South Dakota orders."

    --

    "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
  75. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You have never worked with state gov. have you?
    It will be the difficult to get ever changing, with 1000s of exceptions and inconsistent format.

    What states should do in response is set an out-of-state tax like Indiana does for out of state shareholders. You pay just the state at a flat rate and not the city/county stuff. They could make it such that it it avgs the counties/cities and distribute it. Because politics they won't and they will be off to try to enforce this. Outside some large companies I don't see them actually getting this money.

  76. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by bigpat · · Score: 2

    You will also need a table that lists every item to determine if it is taxable or not. Every 'item' is not taxed the same in every state/county/city. This table is going to get really, really big...

    I hope states will take a hard look at their tax code and look to make them uniform with other states.

  77. Never dealt with a government agency? by raymorris · · Score: 2

    > considering states have direct financial motivation to have this data accurate and available, I don't expect it would be that difficult to implement, or use.

    How have you loves this long and never dealt with a government agency?

    In my experience, agency employees are wrong in what they think the law is, as often as not. For example in Texas the statute states very clearly "X service is not taxable", the taxing authority told me it was taxable. It took several hours to get one of their employees to simply look at the tax code, look at the section I was pointing out to them, and see that plain as day it's not taxable. Even then, the employee didn't know what to do because "yeah the law says it's not taxable, but my boss says it is. I can't fix this."

    If their own employees can't even see what's taxable when you point out the specific code section to them, it seems rather optimistic to think they'll:
    A. Figure it out, for all items and services
    B. Make that info available in an easily parseable way
    AND
    C. Keep it up to date

    Actually I'm not sure that B is even possible. Others have pointed out the tax rate can depend on the ingredients, the size of the package, etc.

    1. Re:Never dealt with a government agency? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We had a case where the state said that memberships to YMCA were not taxable. 20 years later they said they interpreted it wrong, and that they were going to go back and collect all of the past taxes they could.

    2. Re: Never dealt with a government agency? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is against the law.

  78. Catalog shopping by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Did the internet change things, or the telephone? I also haven't read the text, but I never understood why internet orders are any different from telephone catalog orders.

    Because catalog orders were always going to be a limited volume business. Ordering something by phone is actually quite a lot of work relatively speaking both for buyer and seller. It also requires distribution of expensive catalogs, having staff to take orders, and lots of other overhead and transactional friction. Therefore the rule about having a physical presence actually was a reasonable compromise given the realities of catalog shopping. The internet has made shopping FAR easier, faster, and spreads out the infrastructure all over the place. Instead of calling a single call center you might be dealing with servers in one state, payment processing in another, inventory in a third, and staff in a fourth.

    The practical realities of internet shopping are actually quite a bit different than catalog shopping. Catalogs never were going to drive brick and mortar stores out of business.

    1. Re:Catalog shopping by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because catalog orders were always going to be a limited volume business.

      Yes, as we know Sears wasn't a thing and mail order catalogs aren't a thing today.

      Ordering something by phone is actually quite a lot of work relatively speaking both for buyer and seller. It also requires distribution of expensive catalogs, having staff to take orders, and lots of other overhead and transactional friction.

      Originally catalogs weren't sent to each home, and it wouldn't be a great leap to have a post office today with a wall of catalogs. Meanwhile, nowdays everything can be automated with computers over the phone which greatly reduces the overhead.

      Therefore the rule about having a physical presence actually was a reasonable compromise given the realities of catalog shopping. The internet has made shopping FAR easier, faster, and spreads out the infrastructure all over the place.

      You mean Amazon. Amazon is losing money on shipping and that's the massive reason for the success of internet shopping. Otherwise, the overhead of individual shipping would eat most the savings in most circumstances. Add to that the relatively quick delivery times vs mail order of old. The simple fact is that Amazon has set the standard that "internet shopping" == "get it in a week". There's nothing inherent about catalog shopping that stops that.

      Instead of calling a single call center you might be dealing with servers in one state, payment processing in another, inventory in a third, and staff in a fourth.

      Again, behind the scenes none of that matters. The results are equivalent if it's phone or internet. Computers do 90% of the work. This push has been made since at least the 80s when it was viable to have relatively cheap computers everywhere. The internet definitely has changed the order of magnitude of management costs for information transferal, but having the computers and software exist that does the work has a lot more to do with it.

      The practical realities of internet shopping are actually quite a bit different than catalog shopping. Catalogs never were going to drive brick and mortar stores out of business.

      I wonder. How many kit houses and other such mail orders only grew the market instead of displacing other companies? How much "direct marketing" through 1-800 numbers (a direct marketing invention) and "Columbia Record Clubs" stopped local record shops before they started? I think you underestimate the degree of influence mail order had in the past and how much internet shopping is an evolution, not a revolution.

  79. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by fish_in_the_c · · Score: 1

    That's ok , in about 3 years that slush fund will be used by the democrats to repress anyone who opposes the atheistic communist regime of 'taking care of everyone' and anybody who dares to disagree with them about the way it is done. So swings the pendulum because most people are so sick of both parties they keep switching back and forth hoping something will change. You got any better ideas?

    --
    âoeTolerance applies only to persons, but never to truth. Intolerance applies only to truth, but never to persons.
  80. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wouldn't help. All they'd do is remove all the current corporate tax brought in to fund those things and replace it with the internet tax.

    Net result, same underfunded school system while rich bastards keep even more of their money stashed away.

  81. Well there it is, end of the small online store by oldgraybeard · · Score: 1

    There are over 9000+ individual taxing districts in the US. Each has their own crazy rules on what is taxed and what is not. Example in MN a pair of gloves is taxed if they are used to keep the buyers hands clean. But not taxed if the are safety equipment, used to hand glass with sharp edges for instance..

    This is going to change the face of online sales. The small operations may shutdown. And the, Amazons are loving it.

    Just my 2 cents ;)

  82. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by sarren1901 · · Score: 2

    The burden of following the law will fall onto the business. If you sell enough stuff over state lines and draw attention to yourself, the state will want their share. It's your responsibility to pay them or otherwise face legal consequences.

    All these reasons are why cross state sales tax should not happen. It is definitely a burden for small timers.

    Over-burdensome regulation was a listed reason as to why there are fewer startups, as mentioned in an article posted earlier.

  83. where did the saile take place??? by fish_in_the_c · · Score: 1

    So does the state where the company is headquarter get to charge the tax? The state where the companies warehouse is? or the state where the purchaser resides? Is that the same as the shipping address? What if someone coming in on a VPN from vermont, uses a card issued with a billing address in Washington state and has the product shipped to Ohio? who gets to charge the tax?

    --
    âoeTolerance applies only to persons, but never to truth. Intolerance applies only to truth, but never to persons.
    1. Re:where did the saile take place??? by oldgraybeard · · Score: 1

      Sales tax is based on where the buyer is located/item is shipped to. Each of the 9000+ individual sales taxing districts in the US are salivating over the money that they think will come pouring in to their coffers. Remember, this is not just state sales taxes, there is county/parish, city and 1000s of special sales taxing districts in the US.

    2. Re: where did the saile take place??? by fish_in_the_c · · Score: 1

      Where is that written? I
      Even so enforcement seems impossible, and knowing all the possible taxes as well for any small company.

      I don't see this going well, esp. When customers start trying to obscure there location to avoid tax.

      --
      âoeTolerance applies only to persons, but never to truth. Intolerance applies only to truth, but never to persons.
    3. Re: where did the saile take place??? by oldgraybeard · · Score: 1

      This is not about customers. The entire problem is being dropped on online retailers. I am in business, so I have a state sales tax account. I don't sell much in the way of actual products, I am a contract programmer. So I settle up once a year with my state. But I am very careful on the business and personal side to pay my sales tax due.
      Here they are doing fewer income tax audits and more business sales tax audits. Why, the penalties for a small sales tax mistake by a business are big and a better return for the state.
      Any small business who has a tax entity come knocking needs to be very careful. The tax entity has the force of government behind them.

    4. Re: where did the saile take place??? by oldgraybeard · · Score: 1

      Ah I did not answer your question ;) "Where is that written?"
      I work with small retailers, It is in the State where the retailer resides Sales and Use Tax government regulations.
      ATM most small retailers setup for charging/paying sales tax in their state. Sales to elsewhere are generally not taxed. Since the rules say the buyer is usually required to self report to their state/local governments. OK,, hardly anyone does ;)

    5. Re: where did the saile take place??? by fish_in_the_c · · Score: 1

      Interestinging.
      So the obligation business are only required to pay sales taxes for the state they are in, and they can expect the customer to pay the tax if they are in another state.

      Is that based on shipping address billing address or physical location at time of purchase?

      --
      âoeTolerance applies only to persons, but never to truth. Intolerance applies only to truth, but never to persons.
    6. Re: where did the saile take place??? by oldgraybeard · · Score: 1

      In the case of online sales it is the shipping address.
      In the past, yes the company collects sales tax on sales shipped to addresses in the state they are in (you know the tax laws for where you are located), all catalog and online sales that are shipped to other states are not charged the sales tax of the buyers location (a mess to figure out and settle up for).
      That is what is changing. Because few individuals actually self report and pay the sales tax due to their state/taxing district on out of state purchases. The taxing entities are taking the short cut of dropping the collection/payment processing requirement and cost on the seller.
      Interesting that even the rich avoid sales tax due. John Kerry the senator and presidential candidate had his new yacht delivered outside of Massachusetts so he could avoid their state sales tax. John Kerry Saves $500,000

    7. Re:where did the saile take place??? by Agripa · · Score: 1

      All of them.

  84. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For another crazy example, in my state, creating a web page is considered programming, which is taxable. So, if you write something up in Microsoft Word, and save as HTML, it's taxable. If you save it as a Word document, it's not. And yes, I've asked the tax people about it.

  85. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by CanadianMacFan · · Score: 1

    One place putting restrictions on isn't onerous. 50 states plus a bunch of cities all putting different restrictions on is onerous. Especially when it only applies to Internet shopping and not other methods of out of jurisdiction shopping.

  86. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by AvitarX · · Score: 1

    Yeah, because filing 50 state taxes is definitely not over head even if you know the numbers.

    200 transactions at a $100 average (reasonable average for an eBay seller if some type) is only 20k.

    For that 20k, one will need to send and file monthly or quarterly?

    Sure, they're simple to calculate (software, likely Free even), but there is real overhead to filing taxes with different states every month.

    --
    Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
  87. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by AvitarX · · Score: 1

    Every item sold will need to be categorized as taxable or not taxable for every state that has a sales tax. This is as simple as you'd think.

    --
    Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
  88. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Creepy · · Score: 1

    Or the little issue with WHERE to collect taxes. It is based in the purchaser's place of residence, not their brick and mortar store's location. To do that for me you need to collect the 6.5% state tax, bit then you get the fun of detecting county and city, both of which have sales tax levies right now (stadium and courthouse). If the city and county fail to get their cut , more lawsuits will certainly happen.

  89. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nope, that's the status quo. Businesses are not currently required to handle any of the taxes for states that they don't have some sort of physical presence in. And we don't have to specifically because it's onerous to have to keep track of thousands of taxing authorities and then remit the money.

    It's unlikely that you'll even receive a letter from another state as it stands because they don't have the authority to make those demands. This ruling changes that for some businesses selling things bought by individuals that are in South Dakota. Just like how here in Washington, there was a recent law passed that requires certain businesses to advertise the obligation of the taxpayer to pay the sales tax and where to go.

    I don't think that the law here in WA is going to go well because it's completely ridiculous for the state to mandate that we keep such records in order to pay taxes on those goods. The correct thing to do is to have the party doing the selling deal with that.

  90. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by CanadianMacFan · · Score: 2

    They won't make it uniform because each state uses taxes to try and implement it's agenda. For example, a state that wants to try and cut down on the consumption of sugar snacks and drinks for health reasons will heavily tax them. Another state that isn't interested in such a program will tax them at the standard rate. Some states may tax bottled water because it's a convenience item but other's won't because water is a necessity.

  91. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Kjella · · Score: 1

    I think you're very confused and failing some basic economics. If you do $10 worth of work you can pay 10% income tax = $1 and have $9 to buy the product or you can buy the product for $10 and pay 10% sales tax = $1 it works out exactly the same. The only difference comes from having different tax brackets, deductibles, capital gains and import/export. Assuming the government want the same total tax income the first three are easy to deduce, if you pay above average tax you want more sales tax, if you pay below average you want less as the sales tax is a flat percentage for all. As for the last the ideal would obviously to work in a state with no income tax and buy your stuff in a state with no sales tax, so all other things being equal one encourages employment and the other consumption and tourism. Though trade leaks will typically force an alignment so that it's not worth it to most people most of the time.

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  92. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > thus needing to use its infrastructure to deliver them

    Bullshit. The gasoline tax is in every state is to pay for roads and bridges.

    This is just a money grab for more liberal doomed to fail hand outs.

  93. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by AvitarX · · Score: 1

    It sounds like you're describing VAT and not income tax.

    --
    Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
  94. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Quirkz · · Score: 1

    Which means that an online retailer will have to be able to prove he/she/it doesn't meet those minimums anytime the government of South Dakota requires them to.

    Any online retailer that doesn't keep a log of every single transaction, including destination, is doomed to be a failed retailer PDQ. Sure, if they're being harassed for frequent reports it could become an onerous burden, but given it's an annual sales requirement, I think doing a per-state printout once per year isn't that crazy.

  95. Pssst...add a zero by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Several hundred tax schemes only covers WA state :(

    (360 or so?)

  96. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That is actually not possible, the following zipcodes cover multiple states:
    02861 Massachusetts
      02861 Rhode Island
      42223 Kentucky
      42223 Tennessee
      59221 Montana
      59221 North Dakota
      63673 Illinois
      63673 Missouri
      71749 Arkansas
      71749 Louisiana
      73949 Oklahoma
      73949 Texas
      81137 Colorado
      81137 New Mexico
      84536 Arizona
      84536 Utah
      86044 Arizona
      86044 Utah
      86515 Arizona
      86515 New Mexico
      88063 New Mexico
      88063 Texas
      89439 California
      89439 Nevada
      97635 California
      97635 Oregon

  97. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And, depending on which business employ the most people and/or pay the most taxes in a given state, there's an incentive to define exemptions carefully enough to cover certain products that would logically fall into a heavily taxed category. So even if every state heavily taxed the same categories of products, the actual products taxed could be completely different in every state. You basically need every individual UPC and/or product code mapped to every state, county, and municipality tax rate. Now add another axis to take into account the buyer and whatever tax exemptions apply to each class of buyer in each tax region and you'll be closer to achieving a sentient AI than actually making sense of how much sales tax to charge.

  98. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education.. by kenh · · Score: 1

    The problem here is if you are a three employee retailer with a small online presence, states and counties and cities have their own taxes, and you have to determine the applicable rate for every combination.

    No, you don't, that's not how sales taxes work.

    A retailer with a fixed presence charges the state, county, municipal taxes due based on the retailer's physical location, not the delivery address of the customer. Here's an example: in NJ there is an 'enterprise zone' around Newark NJ where the tax rate is one-half the normal NJ sales tax rate. There is an IKEA there, when you buy a piece of furniture they don't ask you if you live inside or outside the 'enterprise zone' to determine the tax rate to apply to the purchase, you pay the lower 'enterprise zone' rate because that is where the store is.

    Internet retailers that have no physical presence in a given state will not be beholdened to collect local, city, municipal sales taxes because they are not located in the city or municipal district.

    Sales taxes are charged based on the store location, not the customer's location.

    This ruling allows states to collect state sales taxes, not city taxes.

    --
    Ken
  99. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by kenh · · Score: 1

    For a 10% sales tax. If a product costs $9.50 to make and can be sold for $10.00, the tax will be $1.00 and revenue only $9.00. As such the transaction will not occur.

    No, you are wrong.

    An item that costs $9.50 to produce, sells for $10, andvis subject to a 10% sales tax will cost the consumer $11, with the seller sending $1 to the state tax collector.

    Sales taxes are paid by the customer, not the seller.

    --
    Ken
  100. Re: The RICH don't pay their share. by kenh · · Score: 1

    And the retailer was fined, they risked jail time, and the customer was forced to pay the taxes.

    It is, and has been for a while, a serious crime aggressively pursued by N.Y. tax regulators.

    --
    Ken
  101. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For a 10% income tax If a product costs $9.50 to make and can be sold for $10.00 the transaction will occur a profit of $.50 will be generated which can then be taxes for $.05.

    That $.05 is paid by the manufacturer, so it changes the net profit to $.45.

    For a 10% sales tax. If a product costs $9.50 to make and can be sold for $10.00, the tax will be $1.00 and revenue only $9.00. As such the transaction will not occur

    That $1 is paid by the consumer, changing the price to $11. The manufacturer still makes $.50 - which may also be taxed by income tax. The transaction still happens (unless it's an item where $11 is too much to pay, but $10 was OK).

  102. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Simple! Then make everything taxable (services, products, whatever), at a flat rate, lets call it 20%. Let's call it a Value-Added Tax, while we are at it. Because, let's be honest, if it didn't have a value as a product or service, you wouldn't be buying it. And lets make sure that the middlemen pay their fair share as well. We're going to close that tax-free loophole. Think of the billions of dollars the government could raise. Why, they might even be able to balance their budget, all while they are making their space farce, too.

  103. So what? They do it anyway by raymorris · · Score: 1

    What the law says and what they do are only very loosely correlated.

    I'm dealing with that with a government agency right now. The agency's own operations manual tells their employees how to handle a certain request based on the dollar amount:

    Under $10,000 : Automatically approved, online if desired, only the request form is needed and nothing on paper required.

    Under $25,000: Fill out form XYZ. Approve it if X is less than 72.

    Over $25,000: Fill out long forms XYZ, YYZ, XXZ, ZZY, ZXY. Approve if the result is less than 60.

    My request is less than $10,000. It's supposed to be approved with no paperwork. The employee is making me do all the long forms as if it's a request over $25,000, and suggesting they won't accept the "less than 60" answer that they are legally required to accept.

  104. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This ruling allows states to collect state sales taxes, not city taxes.

    I see what you are saying, but let me muddy the waters for you. If a purchase is taking place on someone's computer, the old standard was that the state where they bought the would collect tax only if they too were in that state. The transaction was happening on the server. This new standard is, the point of sale is occurring at the person's computer. So, absolutely, the cities and counties are entitled to their fair share. After all, someone has to drive on their roads to deliver the product, the police prevent porch pilferers from stealing it, sometimes the delivery trucks catch on fire, etc...

  105. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by AvitarX · · Score: 1

    I'm all for a healthy VAT.

    I'd personally distribute 50% of it evenly to each citizen over 18 to solve the regressive nature of one, and probably ramp it up slowly, but overall I'm very proud VAT.

    --
    Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
  106. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Except that to pay sales taxes to a state, you need to be registered with the state. Which means paperwork and fees - sometimes hundreds of dollars per state.

    In addition, you're left with the cases like: A person in state X buys something from a company in state Y, but wants it shipped to someone in state Z. Who pays which sales tax?

  107. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There isn't an Indian, alive, dead, or otherwise, than can code-monkey
    such a software solution. It'll take decades, and most of the SP Justices
    will have passed by then.

    This is the stupidest ruling out of the Justices in a while.

    CAP === 'excites'

  108. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by reboot246 · · Score: 1

    That's similar to states that don't have a sales tax on food, well some food. Whether something you eat qualifies as a food that can be taxed sometimes depends on whether you have to cook it or you can simply eat it right out of the package.

    States, counties, and cities created this jigsaw puzzle of tax jurisdictions; and states, counties, and cities need to simplify the system. How about one simple sales tax rate for the whole freaking state?

    Here where I live we have a 4% state tax, a 4% county tax and a 2% city tax. We pay as much to the government in sales tax as we tithe to the church. And just the other day I heard that a city nearby was seriously considering raising their sales tax to 3%!!

  109. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by pr0fessor · · Score: 1

    Standardized software could make tracking and changing the taxes easy , unfortunately filing and paying the taxes would require a lot more to make sure all 50 states filings are done on time and in accordance with the states requirements. This also doesn't account for any fees for a tax ID just so you can pay the taxes.

  110. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by techguymatt · · Score: 1

    Great! Where's the repository so we can download your code?

    Contrary to popular belief on this site, most business code is closed source. However, I am a solid middle of the pack developer and if I can do it just from the Avatax API docs, I'm sure you can too.

  111. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know sales isn't profit, right? That's really not a lot, especially if they're a food retailer where margins hover around 6%, meaning that 100k looks more like $6k in income.

  112. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The only problem I see with the state taxing online purchases is that small online retailers will have extra overhead to meet tax requirements for all states.

    The South Dakota statute in question only required collection/remittance of South Dakota sales tax if the online retailer had more than $100k in sales in South Dakota and/or more than 200 annual transactions in South Dakota. The Supreme Court specifically discussed those thresholds in its analysis, which will be a signal to other states that if they follow suit, they'll need to have some sort of reasonable minimum threshold as well. It would be hard for a truly small retailer to exceed that threshold in a single state in the first place, and then if they did it would only apply to transactions in that state.

    I see. Instead of having to know the tax code for 50 states, I just need to know the thresholds for 50 states, my sales data for each of the 50 states, and potentially the tax code for 50 states.

    Well, that solves that problem! Thanks!

  113. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by tkotz · · Score: 1

    The summary obviuosly also covers health care and infrastructure. Those three could easily cover anything they would wan't to spend the money on. A giant gold statue of the governor sounds like a infrastructure project to me, not a particularly useful one. Buying a copy of the governor's combo autobiography/geometry text for every school for education. Huge contract to an "exercise coach" cousin for health care services.
    I think keeping these tax payments more local to the masses is better to keep the wealth distributed. Instead of the taxes going to the state that happens to have the company incorporated.
    My greater concern is states double dipping and both charging sales tax.
    A better outcome would probably be legislation that all sales across state lines occur in the buyer's (not seller's) state. It would prevent what I think of as consumer colonialism. Where the company sits quietly in its tax haven state and from there rules over the commerce of many other states. Concentrating tax revenue in the state with the lowest taxes. Mostly I'm thinking of Amazon here.

  114. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because poor Asians and blacks have done so remarkably well under democratic control for decades.

  115. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As an atheist I hate any forced religion.

    Oh? So you are on record opposing Jeff Sessions's specifc claim of religion in support of his policies as attorney general?

    You mean any criticisms of Islam?

    The Shariah law in imaginary cities is not criticism but nonsense.

    The next worldwide human rights issue will be being able to leave your religion (apostasy) without fear of death. The UN's resolution has been vetoes by Islamic states since the 1980s.

    More fabricated falsehoods don't help your case.

    The GOP hates blacks and asians? You mean you haven't heard of

    Yes, we have heard of each of these people making racist statements and enacting racist policies.

    and many others too long to list?

    Yes, we have heard racists endorsed by the President and his cohorts too.to

    Re: conservative? Of course the GOP backs social conservatives, free market types, libertarians, etc... the same way that the Democratic Party supports labor and progressive types. Duhhh. What else is a political party supposed to do?

    I'd suggest not fomenting a culture where voters demand the opposing party leaders be punished for not going along with your partisan agenda.

    Or your President. Notice his behavior yet?

  116. Legislation from the bench. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There should be a single online sales tax that is about 6% nationally and paid to the state treasuries. Simple, covers everything, including baby-formula, diapers, and luxury cars, high enough, but not NYC high.

    Asking small online businesses to follow the local and state laws for all sales taxation for each county and city is crazy.

  117. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by ArmoredDragon · · Score: 2

    It's much worse than you think. Such software would have to keep up with every state, municipality, and local government in the US. You're going to have to know which items are taxed at what rate, and whether sales tax applies to certain types of items when combined, and what rate they're taxed at. I bet if somebody took any statistics on these, they'd probably find there are multiple sales tax code changes daily in all of the US.

    All of the major tax software companies are no doubt salivating over this. It will cost a lot, and if any rules are proposed to try to even standardize reporting alone, you bet your ass that their lobbyists will kill it, just like what happened with the IRS's proposal to do everybody's taxes for free (mainly because they already have all of the information they need.)

  118. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
    I'm curious....

    If I live in say MO.....and the state of NM sends you a letter or bill....just WTF can they do to you if you don't pay or what can they do to compel you living in another state to give that state some money?

    --
    Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
  119. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Our state is losing millions for education..."

    Translation: Our state could be stealing millions which could then be spent, in part, on indoctrination camps for children.

  120. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Donâ(TM)t you have to know the state in order to mail the package to the right place?

  121. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Zak3056 · · Score: 1

    No, it will go to Teacher Unions to fund the next "my turn" candidates doomed White House run. I'm not supporting the GOP here, just upset that Democrats erected the stupid "super-delegates" and rigged primary election process.

    Both parties have super delegates, not just the Democrats (though the Democrats have more of them, IIRC). There isn't really anything wrong with them. Primaries are for selecting the party's candidate for the general election. It's reasonable for the party to want to have a counterbalance against populism, or an attempted hijack of the party. Hence, super-delegates, who are universally party insiders and presumably have the party's best interests in mind. The super delegates are part of the process, everyone knows about them, and election strategies account for them.

    On the other hand, when a small group in the party conspires to put their thumb on the scale to get a candidate selected, in secret, THAT is where you have a problem (i.e. the coronation of Hillary, and the attempt by Republican leadership to freeze out Trump. To be fair, I think posterity will likely wish they would have succeeded in the latter case).

    --
    What part of "shall not be infringed" is so hard to understand?
  122. level the playing field by Thud457 · · Score: 1

    Easy peasy - just collect underpants, charge the highest possible sales tax from any locality nationwide!
    Then there's a financial incentive ... for retailers to determine the actual tax rate so they can pocket the difference as profit!

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

    1. Re:level the playing field by jgdnavy · · Score: 1

      In most jurisdictions, if you over-collect something that you label as sales tax, you are required to submit the amount collected, not the amout required.

  123. "and/or" doesn't make any sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It has to be 'and' or 'or' but not both.
    "/" means "and or" to begin with so 'and and-or or' doesn't make any sense.

    So how long before a State start tracking number of purchases and if it is just below threshold the state makes enough purchases (either quantity or dollars) to push it over the threshold?

  124. Our County and City are sueing the State+Others by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If one state can force retailers to collect and pay sales tax, then why cannot Counties, Cities, and other entities that collect sales taxes?

    If you ship to this zip code, forward 1% to this city.
    If you ship to this zip code, forward 1.5% to this city.
    If you ship to this zip code, wait this zip code crosses city/county boundaries.....

  125. It makes sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm like any other consumer who relished not paying taxes online. But obviously this gave online retailers a advantage over brick and mortar stores. Although in my experience purchasing online, I see more retailers collecting sales tax.

  126. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by DCFusor · · Score: 1
    Since nothing here actually increases the amount of money anyone but a state has to pay anyone for anything, the rosy projected numbers will not materialize, though states will start spending this new windfall on "whatever" before they discover what is obvious to anyone who can measure the size of a pie. We all know that state spending is efficient in boosting the economy, more so than personal spending, right? /s
    .

    So they'll keep using super rosy assumed rates of return on their underfunded pension plans, buy votes by spending some tiny fraction on popular initiatives and hire more bureaucrats to increase the warm seat count, increase the old guard pay and bennies, and generally carry on as usual - till they, too late "discover" that this money didn't comein and now they need to borrow...again.
    .

    "I said no camels, that's six camels, can't you count?"

    --
    Why guess when you can know? Measure!
  127. court is clueless about technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Respondents argue that “the physical presence rule has permitted start-ups and small businesses to use the Internet as a means to grow their companies and access a national market, without exposing them to the daunting complexity and business-development obstacles of nationwide sales tax collection.” Brief for Respondents 29. These burdens may pose legitimate concerns in some instances, particularly for small businesses that make a small volume of sales to customers in many States. State taxes differ, not only in the rate imposed but also in the categories of goods that are taxed and, sometimes, the relevant date of purchase. Eventually, software that is available at a reasonable cost may make it easier for small businesses to cope with these problems. Indeed, as the physical presence rule no longer controls, those systems may well become available in a short period of time, either from private providers or from state taxing agencies themselves. And in all events, Congress may legislate to address these problems if it deems it necessary and fit todo so.

    You fucking moron. I address that to the 20-something dipshit millennial law clerk who wrote the preceding quote. This magical software will just appear, function correctly, integrate automatically, updated perpetually, and be a reasonable cost.

  128. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm coming around on Trump. He's still an idiot, but he might not be an awful president.

  129. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Darinbob · · Score: 0

    If they can't figure out how to deal with 50 different tax rates while using a computerized system, maybe they shouldn't be in the business of being an online retailer. Ohmagerd, what if someone from Canada or Belgium wants to buy a product?

    What about the small offline mom and pop stores that were screwed over for more than two decades because online retailers were given preferential treatment? I shed no tears.

  130. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "big business already complies and will gain from this ruling to wipe out the small guys."

    True, but it just means more small companies will sell through, for example, Amazon, who will take care of all that for them.

  131. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Darinbob · · Score: 1

    The online retailers had a sweet sweet deal for over two decades here, being able to offer lower prices than their brick and mortar alternatives. They did not compete because they had a better product, or because they lowered the cost of operations through efficiencies, instead in so many cases the customers chose the online retailer precisely because there was no sales tax.

    Maybe these online retailers should instead say thank you to the supreme court for the many years of preferential treatment they had been given instead of whining that this is going away.

  132. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But now you'll need to keep track of those requirements, times 50 for every state, and keep updated on when those laws change.

    I sell random things on eBay and a couple other sites. Now I'll need to start keeping track of everyone's shipping address. Normally you just print the label and forget about it. Now I'll need to store where everything went. This will open up all buyers to more data breach risks. Sure the larger platforms like eBay will probably automate a lot of it, but I sell on multiple sites so I'll also need to track everything in case I sell 150 items on eBay and 50 through Etsy.

    Plus sales taxes aren't applied evenly to everything. So I'll need to make sure I have lookup tables for each state and manually categorize all my sold items based on where they sold and what they were. Then I have to figure out when and where to pay the taxes. These types of taxes you generally pay multiple times a year, so this isn't a one-time calculation.

    Even if you don't meet the requirements for the tax, you need to record everything so you can prove you don't meet the requirements and in case you happen to sell 201 items that year then suddenly you're screwed if you weren't keeping perfect track of everything beforehand. This will kill off tons of online sellers and increase prices everywhere as we'll have to buy expensive subscriptions to manage everything (and those 3rd party guys will data mine everything you bought as they'll have the item type and your address).

  133. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Darinbob · · Score: 1

    Before online retailers there were stores that still shipped by mail, and they managed to figure out how to collect sales taxes even without today's modern computers helping them out. I think there's a lot of exaggeration when using the word "onerous" here.

  134. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Darinbob · · Score: 1

    So don't sell to those states? If an online retailer's business model was predicated upon having sales tax so that they could compete unfairly with local businesses, then maybe it's a good thing if they go out of business.

    I can only see this as a net benefit to the economy. Fewer online sales but more local sales, more local stores can stay in business, more revenue to the states to keep the infrastructures working, more local jobs, etc.

  135. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Darinbob · · Score: 1

    The alternative of allowing online retailers an unfair commercial advantage is an even worse situation. Either get rid of sales tax in every state or require all retailers to collect the sales tax. The method we had was fundamentally unfair. The sole reason Amazon got off the ground was precisely because they didn't charge sales tax, and this put most local book stores out of business.

    And don't forget the rest of the world. Each country may have their own rules, so why stop at whining about merely 50 US states? Most online retailers would prefer to sell worldwide if they can, and in order to do so they must follow each country's rules.

    If profit is involved then viable businesses will figure out a way.

  136. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Darinbob · · Score: 1

    Yes it's hard. But the situation as it was yesterday was unfair since it gave an unfair competitive advantage to online retailers. So the question is, do you prefer a fair and level competitive playing field or do you think the government granting unfair advantages is a viable long term economic strategy?

  137. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    " all sales taxes should be abolished and replaced by income taxes"

    Aaannnnd - you would see tax revenue decrease drastically. Not for the little guy, the guy who works for someone else is kind of screwed, because his employer reports how much he makes. But the owners, the ones who make tr\he BIG bucks, they get to write off everything under the sun, and find out that at the end of the year ... ooops! They didn't make any profit that you can tax! So all of your big corporations end up paying nothing, and all the middle class is supporting everything in the country. Not fair, but what you end up with.

  138. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    More likely, small sellers will continue to ignore sales tax just as they have always done.

  139. Amazon Australia? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So those of us in Aus, does this mean Amazon.com won't be geoblocked anymore to avoid gathering the GST?

  140. Shipped to Indian Reservation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Aren't Indian Reservations exempt from State Taxes? Ship my stuff there & I'll pick it up at the casino !!!!
    I bet casino's would offer this service for free to get extra folks in.

  141. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I only get shipments by DRONE, so they don't have an impact on state infrastructure!

  142. Now the West can truly be free by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    Finally, we'll stop subsidizing the do nothing states, and our revenues will finally enable us to go 200 percent renewable energy!

    Someone has to build the bike lanes!

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  143. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, they are fucking idiots. They don't understand that not gaining money isn't the same as losing money.

  144. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 2

    I can only see this as a net benefit to the economy. Fewer online sales but more local sales, more local stores can stay in business, more revenue to the states to keep the infrastructures working, more local jobs, etc.

    No, it's not a net benefit to the economy to spend more of your money on taxes. If that were so, the ideal situation to "boost the economy" would be to raise tax rates across the board to, say 99%. That would really boost the economy, right?

    IOW, no, raising taxes isn't a "net benefit to the economy". Taxes are necessary. But "higher" doesn't automagically translate to "better"....

    --

    "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
  145. Online tax make gov grow by AHuxley · · Score: 1

    In Soviet Union no in line tax for you.
    In Capitalist USA double online tax for you.

    Think of what your state will do with your net tax.
    All the new off the street hires for your gov.

    --
    Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
  146. A convention pursuant to Article 5 by tepples · · Score: 1

    Article 5 of the U.S. Constitution describes the process in broad strokes. Two thirds of state legislatures can compel Congress to hold "a convention for proposing amendments". It doesn't specify which delegates shall participate in such a convention; it could be governors, state legislators, or whatever, depending on what the state legislatures put in their petition. But once the convention proposes an amendment, and the legislatures of three fourths of the states vote to ratify the amendment, the amendment becomes part of the Constitution. Or a proposal can come from Congress if two thirds of both houses vote to propose an amendment for the state legislatures to ratify, which has been used more often than a state-initiated convention.

  147. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Illegal for anything else?
    Education? Roads? Police? Medicare?
    LOL!!!

    You all are soo trapped up in the politics, they've got you so programmed and right where they want you. You stupid fucking sheeple.

    Here's EXACTLY how you get your FREE MONEY to pay for whatever education and whatever else you want...

    Well if you stop and consider for the moment that "govern-ment" aka: ruling over you and your mind, aka: theft by force of gunpoint... work slavery for them, taxation, enriching themselves, redistribution to their cronies, etc...
    that government is completely and totally redundant to what you can pay and do DIRECTLY with your local peers, such as PAVE ROADS, HIRE "POLICE", SUPPORT CHARITY and HEALTH,
    COMPLETELY BYPASSING such antique thing as "government" and their needless expenses and maintenance over and above the true base cost of those things...

    Then you won't have to give a shit about "taxes" or unagreed to rulings by so called "judges" that you didn't ask for... because they, as part of that antique you call government... simply wont exist.
    And you'll have an instant 50% more money (that's double for you retards) in your pockets to then go spend half that savings on the true base cost, subservient only to you.

    Taxes... LOL what a fucking joke.
    And you all stupid sheeple bought it, hook line and sinker.

    STOP giving them YOUR money for THEIR palaces.

    Do NOT search this name: "Larken Rose"

  148. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by DarkMagician07 · · Score: 1

    True, but most states require it quarterly at a minimum, which can be a pain.

  149. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by DarkMagician07 · · Score: 1

    That's where it will get interesting. Photographers have been dealing with this for as long as sales tax has been around. If you take a picture that you plan to sell, you have to collect the sales tax based on where the photo was taken a lot of the time.

  150. Things besides where a person is also sets tax by John+Bodin · · Score: 1

    Do not forget that in some places you only have to pay sales tax on purchases over a certain $ amount in certain categories. now what would happen if someone places multiple orders keeping each below the minimum? Any brick and mortar store I been to would not care especially if the person went through different check outs even in a short amount of time but what about an online store who notices they have 6 different orders going to the same person at the same address?

    --
    John
  151. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by DarkMagician07 · · Score: 1

    The problem is that it's not 50 different tax rates. It's sometimes several hundred per state. If I drive one town over and purchase a 99c taxable item, it'll cost me $1.07 due to taxes. If I drive two towns over and by the same 99c item, it'll cost me $1.08 because the tax rate is different due to city and county taxes. Unless the rules state that it needs to be the base state tax, and the local municipalities are not going to get their share, you're looking at a large number of tax districts.

    Look at Seattle and their sugary drink tax. If I drive a little further to Tukwila, I don't have to pay that extra tax. So, if I have that same bottle of Pepsi or Coke delivered to my house, will I have to pay that tax or not?

  152. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by DarkMagician07 · · Score: 1

    Bring up tax evasion charges, then request that MO arrest you on said charges and extradite you to NM?

  153. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by DarkMagician07 · · Score: 1

    IIRC, you pay the state, along with a report of where the goods were sold to just like a photographer does when they shoot at different locations, as it's based on where the photos are delivered to. The state then distributes the city and county portions of sales tax to those municipalities.

    see: Washington Photography Tax Guide

  154. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education.. by DarkMagician07 · · Score: 1

    Exactly this!

    If I order a product from Amazon (I'm also in WA State) and ship it to my house, I get charged the 8.8% sales tax that includes my city/county taxes. If I ship that same package to my daughter's dorm, I get charged 8.3% sales tax. It doesn't matter that Amazon is in Seattle, it matters where the final product will be delivered.

  155. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by _Sharp'r_ · · Score: 1

    Don't forget the City and County taxes for every potential shipping destination in each State, and also what types of items they tax differently (clothes, food, etc... tend to have different sales tax rates in many places) and which specific items fall into which category in each individual locale.

    Having done this since the beginning of e-commerce, it's way more complicated than people think, which is why anyone with half a brain outsources it all to a specialist company/software. As a result, it actually costs the online business more to collect and comply than it does the local brick and mortar business.

    --
    The party of stupid and the party of evil get together and do something both stupid and evil, then call it bipartisan.
  156. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Darinbob · · Score: 1

    For out-of-state mail order in the past you generally didn't have to worry about particular municipalities or counties. The difference is that for mail-order you are paying "use tax" to the state and not "sales tax". Each state had different rules of course, a mish mash just like today with online retail. The courts and congress agreed that such use tax on out of state purchases were allowed.

    There were rules to decide if a company was liable for use tax or not. For example in 1993, Alabama held a company was not liable if it only sent catalogs into the state, in Colorado it were not liable if its only connection to the state was by US mail or common carrier, in Georgia and Hawaii it was always liable, and so forth.

    So you basically figure out for each state if you were liable for paying use tax, and if so how much.

  157. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Jerrry · · Score: 1

    "I'd personally distribute 50% of it evenly to each citizen over 18 to solve the regressive nature of one, and probably ramp it up slowly, but overall I'm very proud VAT."

    Oh, good idea. Reward laziness and mediocrity and punish success. And you know what the lazy are going to do with the money, right? Spend it on drugs. booze, and cigarettes.

  158. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Trump would just be a footnote in history if it wasn't for Hillary's coronation. Mccain got more total votes than Trump. Trump didn't get near enough votes to beat a decent democrat candidate. The only reason he won the primary is because the republican field was too divided and noone would bow out. All the republicans need to do to prevent a future Trump is to implement some sort of runoff voting.

  159. Here comes inflation and buy china by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Inflation by some estimates is more than 10% today If you believe zerohedge. This will pour gasoline on the fire. Also, how will u collect tax from China, Mexico or Canada. I see a lot of out of country purchases in the future.

  160. Not true by DogDude · · Score: 1

    Not only is figuring out the correct amount of tax to collect difficult, but keeping records of taxes collected and remitting them to the proper location would also prove to be a major issue.

    No, it's super easy. Try a Google. There are plenty of services that collect and remit sales tax for a business.

    --
    I don't respond to AC's.
  161. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by CanadianMacFan · · Score: 1

    They only collected sales taxes if they had a presence in the state. Internet sales worked like mail order or telephone sales do. Governments never went after those because it was never became a big enough percentage of sales like online sales have. And as other people have pointed out it is quite complex when you are selling items that can be taxed at three different levels (state, county, city) with three different set of rules and rates. It has been traditional to keep it to places where you have a physical presence as your company would be aware of the rules. Now basically every medium to large sized company needs to know the sales tax laws for every jurisdiction in the country and to keep up with all of their changes.

    It's a bloody stupid decision that will force retailers to either subscribe to one or two software solutions which will limit their choice of operating systems (probably not going to run on Mac or Linux) or force them to sell everything through another online store that can easily handle the taxes but take a large cut (Amazon). This just becomes another hurdle to growing a company. When you are small but growing then expect an audit from the states you don't have a presence in if you don't use one of the two previously mentioned options.

  162. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Darinbob · · Score: 1

    I looked this up, different states had different rules about what "presence" was, and even just mailing in catalogs to the state might count as having a presence. And you were also only taxed at the state level because this as a use tax and not a sales tax.

  163. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Makes no difference, all they have to do is divert some other money that's currently going to education to something else.

    Whenever you see a statement like this, assume it's meaningless. All it really tells you is what constituency the lawmaker currently perceives as the biggest obstacle to their policy.

  164. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Replace internet purchases with mail order catalogue purchases. Why were mail order purchases not taxed?

  165. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Atheists have no say so... you have to believe in something or you will fall for anything....

  166. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by rtb61 · · Score: 1

    You solve that by multiple billing companies in the same place of business. So Taxcheating company No1 to Taxcheating Company No99, the numbers buried in the fine print, the same company but different for billing and taxation purposes. Computers can do it real easy, automatically.

    --
    Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
  167. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You will also need a table that lists every item to determine if it is taxable or not. Every 'item' is not taxed the same in every state/county/city. This table is going to get really, really big...

    Yeah, you might need one of them new fangled computer thingies to keep track of it all.

  168. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Atheism is the belief you are all idiots.

  169. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So we're more gullible because we don't believe in your invisible sky daddy and ask for proof?

  170. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 1

    In at least some states, the burden of paying sales tax falls on the *buyer* if the seller does not *choose* to do so.

    I know about this because about a year and a half ago, I bought a home in Florida from a seller in another state. Guess who had to pay the sales tax on 30-something grand?

    --
    Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
  171. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You say that like people who run shops in the state don't already have to use exactly such a table.

    Cry me a river.

  172. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 1

    This is what Sweden does, only it's 25%.

    --
    Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
  173. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 1

    It's not that simple. Different items can be and are taxed at different rates. Did you miss the Twix vs Snickers discussion earlier? And that's just one tiny example.

    --
    Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
  174. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    TRANSLATION: "I am talking out my ass."

  175. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by lsllll · · Score: 1

    Great! Where's the repository so we can download your code?

    Contrary to popular belief on this site, most business code is closed source. However, I am a solid middle of the pack developer and if I can do it just from the Avatax API docs, I'm sure you can too.

    Woosh, dumbass! He's not talking about seeing your code to use it (because it's most likely shit), but so he can point out all the issues he can identify. Read the thread re: some of the nuances of calculating tax. Here are some you missed:

    • Who are you selling an IV bag to (war vet pays tax, MD doesn't)
    • What are you selling? (Candy with flour has one rate, candy without another, food another, sugary drinks another, books another, should I keep going?)
    • When are you selling? (holiday items not taxes)

    This is not as easy as using a JAVA library to calculate tax and calling it aday.

    --
    Is that a roll of dimes in your pocket or are you happy to see me?
  176. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education.. by lsllll · · Score: 1

    Ken, me thinks you're mistaken ...

    A retailer with a fixed presence charges the state, county, municipal taxes due based on the retailer's physical location, not the delivery address of the customer.

    South Dakota wasn't arguing about charging businesses in their own states selling to other states. They were arguing about all the other businesses selling to South Dakotans. From the text of the suit:

    Concerned about the erosion of its sales tax base and corresponding loss of critical funding for state and local services, the South Dakota Legislature enacted a law requiring out-of-state sellers to collect and remit sales tax “as if the seller had a physical presence in the State.”

    That means each retailer will have to know what tax rate to collect on an item, not just for their own state, but for any of the other 49 and the provinces the imperialist U.S. government has sitting around its borders.

    --
    Is that a roll of dimes in your pocket or are you happy to see me?
  177. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by djinn6 · · Score: 1
    If you think sales tax is why online shopping is dominating, then you need to wake up to the 21st century.

    Reasons why people don't shop at local stores:

    1. It's more expensive, even before sales tax
    2. The gas to drive to the store costs money
    3. Standing at the checkout line is a waste of time
    4. Some things simply aren't sold in your area, and even if it is...
    5. It can take you several hours and many stores to find what you're looking for
    6. Comparing 2 products sold by 2 different stores means going back and forth between them

    If profit is involved then viable businesses will figure out a way.

    Oh? Then why don't we have the cure to cancer yet? There's billions in profits waiting there.

    Businesses are not magic, it's composed of real humans with very human limitations. If the rules are too complex or too vague, businesses are not going to take that risk. And even if they choose to, why do you want them to waste money on tax law compliance? Wouldn't you rather take that money as taxes?

  178. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by bingoUV · · Score: 1

    The term "use tax" is not a very logical replacement of / addition to the term "sales tax". With mail order / online sales - it is not clear where the sales happened. On the computer when clicked "Buy", in the bank branch from where money was deducted for the customer, in the bank branch where money was deposited for the seller, at the godown where the product was stored, or at the place where the product was delivered.

    With "use tax" - the product might be used / consumed while travelling in multiple places. An online ordered hat can be worn all over the world. Generally people don't mean to tax that.

    So what we need is still "sales tax", but a more well defined definition of where the sales happened (it could be defined to have happened in multiple parts).

    --
    Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
  179. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by bingoUV · · Score: 1

    This is not a "raising" of taxes. It is a different distribution of taxes - better distribution according to the GP. The proof of "better" is extremely difficult, so I won't get into that.

    But at least understand the statement you are replying to.

    --
    Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
  180. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by bingoUV · · Score: 1

    If it is a hard to find item in the area, you can still get it online, just for 5-10% more

    Why would the "item in the area" not be liable to sales tax and only online would ? Or are you saying different taxes are applicable between getting locally vs getting it online ?

    --
    Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
  181. A Compromise by LaughingRadish · · Score: 1

    If collecting income taxes for all states is going to work, there's going to have to be some sort of legislation to rein in the wildly expanding scope of what is/isn't taxable and at what rates. How about this

    A one-to-one table of state/territory with a fixed sales tax rate for each.
    Each "out of state/territory" tax rate is an average of all the rates within that state/territory.
    No exceptions for any items to avoid quibbles like the candy with/without flour scenario described earlier.
    Each state/territory tax agency will have an office for collecting and processing incoming and outgoing sales taxes.
    A online/mailorder seller files a report of sales taxes collected broken down among the 50 states and 6 inhabited territories and pays just that agency.
    The agency is then responsible for distributing tax monies to other agencies.
    A retailer must gross at least $100k (adjusted for inflation) for three years before this kicks in, otherwise only the home state gets to share in the booty.

  182. New technology = new legal issues by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Which should have exactly ZERO bearing on the constitutional issues involved.

    Sure it does. Any time a new technology comes into play you have to take some time to figure out how it fits into the existing legal framework or if you need to revise laws to better deal with the new reality. You can't just automatically plug in the old legal framework for interstate commerce to something as game changing as the internet and assume it will be a perfect fit. Some new laws will have to be written and new legal rulings will have to be made to decide how the details should be handled going forward. You can keep the basic principles unchanged if desired but the details matter greatly when you try to ensure those principles are upheld.

    The government doesn't get infringe on your right to speak, or assemble, or defend yourself - and not only when you only do it a little, or a lot. Those principles are one size fits all.

    The principles don't have to change but the circumstances and technologies do and so the legal details necessarily must change to properly support the principles. The internet didn't exist when the Constitution was written so we have to figure out what free speech and free assembly and privacy etc means under the circumstances that arise. This isn't always obvious and prior precedents don't always make sense anymore.

    Phoning, faxing, driving, mailing, or app-submitting an order to a retailer should have nothing whatsoever to do with whether that business is obligated to act as an agent of an out of state government where the business's owners don't even have a vote.

    That's a reasonable statement of principle but you need to flesh out the details. The simple fact is that commerce via internet has introduced some new challenges to address and we need to come to a collective understanding of how they will be handled. States have a reasonable interest in taxing commerce that occurs within their state both incoming and outgoing. Our previous system (only tax the purchaser if in state) made sense both in principle and from a practicality standpoint prior to the rise of the web. But it's pretty easy to argue that while the principles still holdsthe practical realities in the face of the internet no longer make much sense in a lot of cases. So Congress sooner or later is going to have to get involved and work out some laws to address the day to day issues presented by internet commerce between states. This isn't a bad thing necessarily.

    1. Re:New technology = new legal issues by whoever57 · · Score: 1

      Sure it does. Any time a new technology comes into play you have to take some time to figure out how it fits into the existing legal framework or if you need to revise laws to better deal with the new reality

      But we are not talking about revising laws. We are talking about applying the constitution. If you are an orginalist, the ease of selling over the Internet should not affect how existing laws and the Constitution are applied.

      States have a reasonable interest in ...

      Please tell me where "reasonable interest" appears in the Constitution.

      "Originalists" are just as much (if not more so) idealogues, since they ignore the actual text when convenient. For example, the idea that the Federal government can regulate anything that "affects" interstate commerce, while the word "affects" (or any synonym for it) does not appear in the Interstate Commerce Clause.

      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
  183. I don't get a voice by sjbe · · Score: 1

    But you have elected representatives that can face that CA legislator in the house or senate and speak (and vote) on your behalf.

    It's adorable that you actually believe the elected representatives in my municipality have any interest in speaking or voting on my behalf. In my state every branch of state government is controlled by a single political party and let's just say that we don't see eye to eye on very many issues. And the fact is I DO have an elected representative that can (in principle) deal with the issue because interstate commerce is regulated by CONGRESS and they are perfectly free to pass laws to deal with interstate sales taxes.

    You do NOT have anyone representing you some other state house as that state sets up it's own rules for sales taxation that suddenly YOU are obliged to collect for them in your own state.

    When I travel to another state in person they often charge sales tax on purchases I make while there and I didn't get any vote on that tax rate so I don't see any reason why it should be different in principle just because I'm buying something over the internet. If I don't like the price I'm perfectly free to decline to purchase. And honestly it kind of makes sense to allow states to tax both incoming and outgoing sales if we allow sales taxes at all. I suspect you'll see a lot of internet businesses start to warehouse products in states where there isn't a sales tax if states get too greedy.

    1. Re:I don't get a voice by ScentCone · · Score: 2

      It's adorable that you actually believe the elected representatives in my municipality have any interest in speaking or voting on my behalf.

      It's adorable how you think that condescendingly using words like "adorable" in a fit of lazy ad hominem to avoid the topic is somehow persuasive. I live in a state that is totally gerrymandered by the Democrats, and so I too am not satisfied by my local state legislature's reflection of my own views. But if I can be persuasive enough and join up with enough like-minded people, there is a structural, functional mechanism in place for people in this state to impact the way that this state charges sales and use taxes. There is no such path for me to alter who sits in YOUR legislature or governor's office and sets/executes your local sales tax laws.

      When I travel to another state in person they often charge sales tax on purchases I make while there and I didn't get any vote on that tax rate

      But YOU are making the choice to physically enter that state and subject yourself to those tax laws. And their local traffic laws. And their local recycling ordinances. And whether and how you have to pick up after your dog. So what? When in Rome. But this is about the people in that state saying that the people in ANOTHER state have to act on their behalf and serve an out of state government's tax collection wishes.

      I suspect you'll see a lot of internet businesses start to warehouse products in states where there isn't a sales tax if states get too greedy.

      You are completely, 100% not understanding what this is about. It doesn't MATTER where the goods are warehoused. With this new situation, it's where you SHIP it to that suddenly becomes the issue. You could operate your business in Delaware where there is NO sales tax. But if you ship to South Dakota, you in Delaware now have to act as a tax collection agent for South Dakota, collecting, filing, and remitting money according to every little twist and turn of that state's tax code on its own in-state buyers. If you ship, from your Delaware business, a stick of deodorant to Texas, you need to know that means collecting 6.2% sales tax on that item, and where (and how often) you need to report that TO TEXAS and pay them. But you also need to know that if it's a deodorant-antiperspirant product, the sales tax on that, in that state, is 0%. Got it? Now recognize that there are over 10,000 taxing authorities you'll have to interact with, on millions of products that have different rules in each of them, and which also have the tax rules change on different days depending not on when you ship the goods, but on the day they are delivered.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
  184. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

    Bring up tax evasion charges, then request that MO arrest you on said charges and extradite you to NM?

    I can see the Feds being able to get you for federal tax invasion.

    But, I'm wondering if a state, you don't live in, never enter....can reach over state lines to bring you in.....

    It's going to be interesting to see where this ends up.

    --
    Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
  185. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Talderas · · Score: 1

    If it were just 50 state sales taxes it would be simple. If this stops at state sales taxes then it's not bad but this will lead to counties and cities applying Internet sales taxes which will likely see court challenges. It will probably also lead to states trying to leverage excise and other local taxes against online retailers as well.

    This is a general problem for businesses and not one isolated to online retailers. The problem is no different for Amazon than it is for any brick and mortar company and the burden is approximately equivalent. The sales in S.Dakota are peanuts compared to many other states and there's enough states they don't have nexus in that would be sufficient to justify picking up a tax system to handle the myriad of taxes which need to be collected which could also handle the peanuts they get from S.Dakota. The online retailers that can be hurt by this with onerous costs are the smaller ones that many only have a small number of sales with respect to the state's population and that's why the transaction count and dollar amount limits are crucially important.

    200 transactions is a pretty reasonable limit for S.Dakota. It means you have to make a sale for every 4,350 people living in S.Dakota. That's a fairly significant market penetration for the state. If you compare a limit of 200 transactions for a state like California then you're talking about making a sale for about every 200,000 people living there. That's barely penetrating the market in California. In the case of S.Dakota you pretty much have to be an online vendor physically located in the state, a regional vendor selling mostly in S.Dakota and it's neighboring states, or a behemoth retailers like Amazon.

    --
    "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
  186. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Talderas · · Score: 1

    For the purpose of taxation you need to know the product being sold as well as the physical address of the sale. Taxation levels can be different on different sides of the same road which can be within the same zipcode. If you ever get involved with tax collection for business you'll very quickly realize that it's obscene.

    You're assuming that this is where the buck stops on taxation of online purchases. This is just the opening salvo. Next up is going to be county and city sales taxes. After that will be excise and other taxes.

    The transaction count limit or dollar limit for compliance is crucial but S.Dakota did it in a bad way. They shouldn't have wrote 200 transactions. It's non-scalable. Hopefully the courts are cognizant of that when California drops theirs into the fray because if they wrote 200 transactions then that's going to be an onerous high compliance cost to do business in California. Ideally, the transaction/dollar thresholds should be based on census population counts.

    --
    "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
  187. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Talderas · · Score: 1

    The burden of paying the sales tax is on the buyer in all cases. The seller is just legally required to collect it on behalf of the collection agency.

    Sellers may opt to pay the sales tax for you or would be required to pay it for you if they neglected to collect the sales tax.

    --
    "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
  188. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Talderas · · Score: 1

    Business already exist that provide that service. They're not cheap to use.

    --
    "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
  189. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Avatax is one of the service platforms provided by the company Avalara which is in the business of accumulating and calculating total taxes for a purchase based on the good and the address to which its delivered. You pay them for access to their tax data and they calculate the taxes you need to charge/collect. The nice thing is they hold the liability if you get a bill for undercollecting taxes. Most of these services you either utilize an API to access the data or directly install software they've made.

    So woosh on your part?

  190. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, it will go into the GOP slush-fund to finance the latest attempts to demonize anyone not white, not Christian and not conservative.

    As a South Dakotan, I can say for certainty that the over 2/3 majority Republicans in my state will not put this latest windfall towards education. They recently passed a sales tax increase that was supposed to go to education and all it did was increase the general fund to pay for other junk.

  191. Distinctions without differences by sjbe · · Score: 1

    It's adorable how you think that condescendingly using words like "adorable" in a fit of lazy ad hominem to avoid the topic is somehow persuasive.

    Fair enough. I think your arguments are badly flawed but you are right, that was unbecoming of me.

    There is no such path for me to alter who sits in YOUR legislature or governor's office and sets/executes your local sales tax laws.

    Sure there is. You think voting is the only or even the most effective means of changing policy? I'm perfectly free to wander into your state and to try to influence your election to my hearts content. Odds are it will actually have more effect than my vote. The notion that only my vote matters is manifestly absurd.

    But YOU are making the choice to physically enter that state and subject yourself to those tax laws.

    A distinction without a difference. Seriously, you fail to make any compelling argument why that should matter at all. There is literally no meaningful difference between that and "subjecting" myself to their local tax laws by having them ship the purchase to me instead of showing up in person. It's a useless distinction.

    You are completely, 100% not understanding what this is about. It doesn't MATTER where the goods are warehoused.

    Yes it does matter because the state where they are warehoused is going to want a cut of the tax revenue. This didn't matter a lot when people didn't buy much stuff from warehouses but now that it accounts for large percentages of total commerce it suddenly is very relevant. States were willing to forego a modest percentage of sales tax revenue but the amount is no longer modest so we have to rethink how we want to do things.

    With this new situation, it's where you SHIP it to that suddenly becomes the issue.

    That is incorrect. The problem we have is that we have separated the physical location of the buyer and seller. It used to be that they generally had to physically meet for most transactions so we could get away with ignoring the sales tax problem by saying it only applied to in-state purchases. This was an act of expediency, nothing more. States could afford to let this go because the volume of inter-state purchases was relatively small. That is no longer the case so now states are looking at how to structure taxation to account for the fact that transactions may not have buyer and seller physically co-located. Just because we've historically done it one way does not mean we have to continue to do the same thing no matter what.

    The world has changed and now the laws have to catch up to the new reality.

    Now recognize that there are over 10,000 taxing authorities you'll have to interact with, on millions of products that have different rules in each of them, and which also have the tax rules change on different days depending not on when you ship the goods, but on the day they are delivered.

    Yep it's complicated. Which is why Congress will sooner or later HAVE to get involved so we don't have states and cities feuding over the problem. I'm an accountant so I understand the complexity better than most. But what probably will happen is that there will be some sort of computerized clearinghouse system to provide tax rates and shuffle the money where it needs to go. Some middleman corporation will basically make a killing maintaining and selling access to such a database. There are other possible solutions as well. Congress can make this simple but even if they don't it's a solvable (albeit big) problem. Probably the easiest thing to do (still not easy) would be to establish some sort of standard interstate tax rate which recovers most of the lost tax revenue for states and simplifies the transactions.

    What is clear is that the old system of only paying tax on in-state transactions is probably going away for good sooner or later. We can get ahead of the problem or ignore it and reap the consequences.

    1. Re:Distinctions without differences by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      A distinction without a difference.

      What? You can choose to enter a neighboring state to buy a cup of coffee or not. If you don't do that, and buy it instead in YOUR state where there's no sales tax, that's your choice. If you'd rather buy it across the river in the next state where it happens to be taxed as a luxury item, that's your choice. That's not in any way similar to shipping goods. Sure, I suppose a mom-and-pop coffee roasting company could simply refuse to ship goods to your state so they don't have to act as a tax collecting agency for your state.

      Yes it does matter because the state where they are warehoused is going to want a cut of the tax revenue.

      They already get it! They can charge you property taxes on your warehouse, utility taxes, income taxes, licensing fees - whatever they want. YOU choose where to locate your warehouse according to what you like or don't about a given jurisdiction's policies that way. But now, all the sudden, you have to deal with the tax whims and administrative costs of 10,000 other jurisdictions, and have no choice in the matter. How are you not seeing the distinction?

      That is incorrect.

      No, it IS correct. Sales tax laws ALWAYS operate based on the final destination of the product. If you walk into the store, you're taking possession of the goods in that store, which is in whichever jurisdiction it sits in. Sales taxes are local to the store. If you SHIP goods to your door, the goods are considered delivered when the carrier hands them over. The "sale" has taken place, delivery-wise, at the delivery address. Any sales tax considerations revolve around THAT address. That's why - until now - a state could only enforce tax collection orders against a business that also had a physical presence in the same state as the delivery. I've been working in and around these topics for thirty years. I know what I'm talking about, and you can too by just looking it up. The new ruling doesn't change where the sales is considered taxable (it's still based on the ship-to address), but changes the fact that even if a business doesn't have a physical presence in the ship-to state, that state can still force the out-of-state business to collect taxes for them. THAT is what's changed.

      Probably the easiest thing to do (still not easy) would be to establish some sort of standard interstate tax rate which recovers most of the lost tax revenue for states and simplifies the transactions.

      Which is also a non-starter, because every state has different ideas about the appropriate way to raise and mange the funds they need to operate their jurisdictions. There are many that have NO SALES TAX at all, and like it that way. They'd have to completely re-tool their entire citizen/business/government relationship with everyone in their state just because some OTHER state now thinks they should be able to make a remote state collect taxes for out of state shoppers. If congress set up some sort of nationwide flat sales tax, it would impact people's mortgages, business leases, multi-year licensing rules ... it would change the reason that thousands of businesses and residents even live and operate where they do.

      Or ... those states that feel they're missing out on the cash, here, could do something crazy like make their state an attractive place for mail order operations to do business, and bring some of that revenue back in the form of income and property taxes instead of trying to make some one-woman knitting supply company in Maine work as a tax agent for California.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
  192. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Darinbob · · Score: 1

    We had the same issue with mail order before the internet, a process that was working well for longer for a very long time. What's paid is "use tax" and not "sales tax" and the company pays to the state and not to counties or municipalities.

    For example, in California you are required to pay use tax for online purchases you have made, but the rate is flat for the entire state, you don't have a complicated table listing all cities and counties.

  193. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If a product costs $9.50 to make and can be sold for $10.00

    In what quantity? In your sales tax example, if the only available widgets are $10 + $1 tax, then a smaller number of people will likely pay $11 from their pocket. The manufacturer will still make $.50 profit

  194. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Darinbob · · Score: 1

    So don't report the use tax if you buy some food and eat it w/o bringing it into your home state. It may not be logical but it's been the practice for ages, it's nothing new. Use tax is essentially the same as sales tax (but only at the state level). Normally it's not an issue since the state you purchased in applies their own sales tax that you can deduct, and taxpayers do their own assessments, so it's rarely worth the effort to figure this out for purchases made in person. However for mail orders, phone orders, online purchases, or anything that gets shipped, then often the vendor is required to collect and pay the use tax based upon the delivery location.

    The difference with online purchases is that for slightly more than two decades the internet was given an exemption from collecting use tax under the rationale that the US wanted to grow the fledgling internet economy.

    Congress has full power to change some of these rules as well.

  195. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by pr0fessor · · Score: 1

    States tend to have certain requirements, in order to pay the sales tax you first need a state tax id which is paper work and a fee and many have to be filed for every year. Then there are different requirements for filing and paying the taxes in each state some quarterly some annually. Some have different types of sales taxes that are paid on a different schedule. Some states have approved tax software not all states have the same approved tax software.

    Basically if all 50 states decided that online retailers had to pay state sales tax they would bury them in paperwork not a problem for very large retailers like Amazon who have tax attorneys but an issue for any start up.

  196. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Toad-san · · Score: 1

    Heh, tell that to Nawth Ca'lina. Those pukes at the capitol even stole the lottery profits!

  197. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by bingoUV · · Score: 1

    Normally it's not an issue since the state you purchased in applies their own sales tax that you can deduct, and taxpayers do their own assessments, so it's rarely worth the effort to figure this out for purchases made in person. However for mail orders, phone orders, online purchases, or anything that gets shipped, then often the vendor is required to collect and pay the use tax based upon the delivery location.

    Yes, and the "exemption" that mail order / internet etc sales enjoyed was because most sales were not made this way, and it would complicate the law without much benefit if things were taxed in more complex ways. Now a much larger proportion of sales is being made through internet, so something must be done.

    But that something being "use tax" is a very wrong solution. It is another false oversimplification - where no one really cares about use. People care about the infrastructure used to enable the sale in the first place. The following jurisdictions deserve to collect at least some tax :
    1. The state(s) where the buyer lives / works obviously provided economic opportunities to the buyer to earn the money and keep it to make this particular purchase.
    2. The state(s) where bank transactions happen obviously provided a lot of financial security - through good laws , regulation and law enforcement.
    3. The state (s) where the company selling the goods is located, where the warehouse is located.

    The jurisdiction where a person wears a hat, or drinks his Amazon ordered Coca Cola has a much much lower moral right on any tax about that sale than the ones I listed above, right ? Then why another false oversimplification of "use tax", instead of defining the jurisdiction of the "sale" more rigorously and divvying up the "sales tax" appropriately between all the involved jurisdictions ?

    So don't report the use tax if you buy some food and eat it w/o bringing it into your home state

    And where to report it if I wear the hat all over the world before reaching my home state ? In France I wear it 20 hours but take only 45 photos of which 22 were uploaded to Facebook getting 8653 likes so far. What is the France tax rate ? On the other hand, in Japan I wore it 83 hours, slept wearing the hat once, took 21 photos and shared the photos only through email to family. In Nigeria, I used the hat to save myself from the hot sun, though I am not sure I lost an opportunity to make some Vitamin D in the process. What is Nigeria tax rate ?

    --
    Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
  198. Montana by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Montana doesn't have sales tax. So what if you life in Montana? What if your business resides in Montana?

  199. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by jgdnavy · · Score: 1

    When I was in California, going to Subway, if you had the sandwich toasted it was prepared food that had full sales taxes, but if it wasn't it was considered groceries and had no taxes applied. Where I am now, for normal items it's 6.5%, but for restuarant food, it's 11% (not sure what the city/state breakdown is)

  200. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by cthulhu11 · · Score: 1

    The irony is that South Dakota made it very clear in 2016 that they don't *want* healthcare and education.

  201. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education. by lsatenstein · · Score: 1

    The presidency can go on and on, president or no president. If POTUS was impeached and the V.P. refused to take on the role, it is likely that Congress and the Senate could do a better job than what the population is experiencing today.

    By the way, without immigration, the population is shrinking in numbers.

    --
    Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
  202. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    In real estate? Sue the escrow company. They should have collected all transaction fees and charges.

    Not sure if true in Florida, but it would be a weird exception.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  203. You can't always get what you want by Shirley+Marquez · · Score: 1

    I had hoped that the rise of the internet would lead to the death of sales tax, the most regressive form of taxation, and force a shift to income and property taxes instead. Sadly it has not played out that way, and governments have moved to protect their sales tax revenue rather than shift to fairer forms of taxation.

    Income, sales, and property taxes are the three major basic forms of taxation; nearly everything else is a special case of one of them. (A tariff, for example, is a sales tax that is only levied on imported goods.) Sometimes the names disguise the true nature of the tax. (Massachusetts has what the state calls an excise tax on car ownership, but it's based on the value of the car so it's really a property tax. A true excise tax is a tax that is levied at the time of manufacture rather than the time of sale, and usually has the same net effect as a sales tax.) There are less common taxes like residency tax and poll tax that rarely constitute a significant part of government income; those usually have non-financial goals as their primary motive. (Poll tax, for example, is about keeping the poor from voting.) Governments can also raise money with fees for using government services and fines for minor violations, which can effectively be another form of tax if most people pay them.

  204. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "For one, sales tax is added to the price, not included in it, in the US. " Final price is what determines market equilibrium, if the market equilibrium is at $10 the final price is at $10 after tax.

    "Also you're confusing corporate income tax with personal income tax and then trying to compare with sales tax." No I am not. That part of your response is just a word salad and you seem to have gotten yourself confused and are ignoring the obvious point to try and pretend that simple examples cant be made as the system is sooooo complicated.

    Sales taxes create market inefficiencies because the reference to the total price and ignore the margin, thus they can prevent otherwise profitable transactions. Income taxes simply do not have the same problem.

  205. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I think you're very confused and failing some basic economics." You reference economics, than go on about an accounting point.....that was clearly addressed in the original statement........

  206. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by plague911 · · Score: 1

    "Sales taxes are paid by the customer, not the seller." That is simply propaganda. You have obviously never taken an economics class. In econ 101 somewhere around the 4th week they will discuss who pays a tax. The answer is "it depends on the supply and demand elasticity." The only time a consumer pays the whole tax would be if the consumers' demand is perfectly inelastic, and the producers supply is perfectly elastic. IE never in the history of the world.

  207. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The state will ALWAYS want more money for education. It's an easy sop that gets trotted out continually. But most people are unaware just how much goes towards it. What's a reasonable amount of a state budget for education? Keep in mind we also need roads, healthcare, and everything else.

    In California, that number just for K-12 is approx 41% of the total state budget. And that doesn't include an additional 30 billion from other sources If you're already spending roughly half your income on education and it sucks, you're doing something wrong.

  208. Lose/lose situation by rossdee · · Score: 1

    Because of this decision I will be spending less online than I would of done.
    I won't be spending any mire locally than I would of done.

    Previously about 90% of my online purchases were through Amazon, so I would have paid state sales tax anyway.

    And since I am not spending so much, I don't need to earn so much, so I am less likely to pick up hours - So I will be paying less (state and federal) income tax.

    Sounds like a good way to put the country back into recession.

  209. Re:"Our state is losing millions for education.... by Agripa · · Score: 1

    So long as the "patchwork problem" can be handled by standard, easy to use software, it should not add appreciably to even a small retailer's costs. Just don't make them handle any tax differential that affects an area smaller than one zipcode.

    Taxing jurisdictions have nothing to do with zip codes.

    Even the states cannot keep track of which taxes apply to which items in each taxing jurisdiction yet they expect others to be able to do it under penalty of prosecution if they get it wrong. Software is not going to make it easier; it will make it more complicated.

  210. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Agripa · · Score: 1

    That is an easy technology fix. Sorry. A simple table with Zipcode and Taxrate.
    You add the tax to your final total. Then pay the states the tax.

    Tax jurisdictions do not follow zip codes.

  211. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Agripa · · Score: 1

    Like that will happen, why would the states want to make it easy?

    Ignorance of the law is no excuse and the more people potentially violating tax law means more work for government employees and more fines. This is going to be like printing free money via traffic tickets but now they can persecute people who are citizens of other states who have no representation.

  212. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Agripa · · Score: 1

    You will also need a table that lists every item to determine if it is taxable or not. Every 'item' is not taxed the same in every state/county/city. This table is going to get really, really big...

    And when the state gets it wrong, you get prosecuted.

  213. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

    Like that will happen, why would the states want to make it easy?

    Because Congress can force them to make it easy if they want to be able to collect the sales tax.

  214. Re: "Our state is losing millions for education... by Agripa · · Score: 1

    Like that will happen, why would the states want to make it easy?

    Because Congress can force them to make it easy if they want to be able to collect the sales tax.

    Congress could have done that at any time in the past decades and did not bother.

  215. We do need taxes.... by martinfb · · Score: 1

    While we need taxes to maintain government, we also need those taxes to be fair.
    All I ask is for true, open, sensible, audited taxes that are fair.

    So, then, who should be taxed? The seller, and/or the buyer?

    --


    Self-importance and self-indulgence is the root of ALL evil.
  216. Amazon collecting sales tax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I live in Arkansas.

    I'm already paying sales tax to order from Amazon.

    Amazon agreed to half of what Arkansas wanted to prevent having to go to court.

  217. Make money by paid surveys by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

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