ASE Labs
Welcome Guest. Please register or log in now. There are 268 people online (0 Friends).
  • Home
  • Articles
  • News
  • Forum
  • Register/Login

Petition Announced in Support of Bill that Helps Protect Consumer Privacy

Poster: SySAdmin
Posted on September 1, 2010 at 9:07:01 AM
Petition Announced in Support of Bill that Helps Protect Consumer Privacy

FedTax.net launches YES5660.com, an internet petition supporting the Main Street Fairness Act.

SEATTLE, Sept. 1 -- The Federal Tax Authority (FedTax.net) has launched an online petition for consumers and retailers to demonstrate support for the Main Street Fairness Act and its protection of anonymity on internet sales.

The Main Street Fairness Act (H.R. 5660), currently before Congress, will modernize and simplify existing sales tax collection laws and therefore eliminate the need for states to enact reporting laws that may threaten consumer privacy. It also has the potential to deliver billions of dollars in sales tax revenue to local communities--without raising taxes or creating a new tax.

Introduced by Congressman William Delahunt (D-MA), the Main Street Fairness Act would allow states to require out-of-state retailers (except for small businesses, which are exempt) to collect sales tax. Under current laws, consumers are responsible for reporting and submitting the sales tax due on their online purchases. However, because so few consumers send in those taxes, there is a growing trend among states to require internet merchants to report consumers' purchases to state revenue agencies--a practice that some consumer advocacy groups believe violates consumers' privacy. With records of consumers' online purchases in hand, states can pursue individuals to collect the sales tax due on their online purchases.

By shifting the remittance of sales tax from consumers to retailers, the Main Street Fairness Act makes reporting customers' purchases to the state unnecessary. Once the Main Street Fairness Act becomes law, consumers will no longer be expected to track every internet purchase, and they will not have to worry about their online purchases being reported to the government.

"We can already see what's going to happen if the Main Street Fairness Act doesn't pass," said R. David L. Campbell, CEO and co-founder of FedTax.net. "States have already started requiring online merchants to report on their consumers' purchases. They're facing tremendous budget shortfalls and they're looking for ways to enforce the current law. But collecting personally identifiable information about online purchases is the wrong way to go--it violates consumers' privacy."

Colorado now requires internet retailers to provide the state's department of revenue with a year-end list of consumers' purchases. Other states, such as California and Oklahoma, have considered similar legislation.

North Carolina is currently requesting information from Amazon.com about its customers' purchases as part of the state's efforts to collect sales tax on internet purchases. Amazon and the ACLU have filed suit against North Carolina in response, claiming that the state's request violates customers' privacy. Katy Parker, legal director of the ACLU of North Carolina Legal Foundation, told the Charlotte Business Journal, "There is no legitimate reason why government officials need to know which North Carolina residents are reading which books or purchasing which specific brands of products."

In addition to protecting consumer privacy, the Main Street Fairness Act benefits local communities by providing a way for them to receive more sales tax revenue, which pays for services such as schools, police, and libraries. The decline in sales tax revenue over the last ten years is directly related to the increase in online sales. According to a 2009 University of Tennessee study, uncollected sales tax on online purchases will reach $8.6 billion this year alone.

Supporters of the bill argue that it would close a tax loophole that hurts local businesses. Bricks-and-mortar retailers are required to collect sales tax on every purchase, while online retailers are not. The Main Street Fairness Act, say supporters, would level the playing field.

Critics argue that calculating sales tax for all the tax jurisdictions across the nation would be too difficult for online retailers. Not so, says Campbell. "Technology today enables anyone with an entrepreneurial spirit to open an online store. Similar technology also makes it easy to calculate sales tax. It's no more complicated than calculating shipping costs or using any of the other sophisticated, location-based features now common in internet shopping carts."

FedTax.net's own TaxCloud service, which is free to merchants, is designed to help online retailers calculate, collect, and remit sales tax. Merchants who sign up with TaxCloud can instantly calculate the sales tax due on any transaction for over 13,000 tax jurisdictions.

Consumers and retailers who want to help protect consumers' right to privacy can go to YES5660.com to find the internet petition in support of the Main Street Fairness Act.

About FedTax.net

The Federal Tax Authority (FedTax.net) is a private company that is committed to making it easy for online merchants to calculate, collect, and remit sales tax. It was founded by technology veterans with extensive experience in the large-scale development, deployment, and support of internet-based services in environments with extremely high transaction volumes and financially sensitive information. The management team has been directly involved in building some of the most recognizable brands in e-commerce, including MasterCard, Google, Microsoft, and Expedia.

FedTax.net has been designated a Certified Service Provider by the Streamlined Sales Tax Governing Board. The company's TaxCloud service enables e-commerce retailers to easily calculate and remit sales tax across the country. TaxCloud is free to merchants and can be easily integrated into virtually any accounting or e-commerce shopping cart system.

FedTax.net is headquartered in Seattle, Washington, and has an office in Stamford, Connecticut.

  For additional information, visit FedTax.net or contact:

  Beatrice Vaccaro
  The Federal Tax Authority
  bvaccaro@FedTax.net
  206-452-1686

Source: The Federal Tax Authority
   

CONTACT:  Beatrice Vaccaro, The Federal Tax Authority, +1-206-452-1686,
bvaccaro@FedTax.net

Web Site:  http://fed-tax.net/
 
Print This Entry
Tags PR Press Release
Related Articles
  • Huntkey Has Launched Its New Power Strips with USB Chargers on Amazon US
  • Inspur Releases TensorFlow-Supported FPGA Compute Acceleration Engine TF2
  • Hot Pepper Introduces Spicy New Smartphones in US Markets
  • Sharp Introduces New Desktop Printers For The Advanced Office
  • DJI Introduces Mavic 2 Pro And Mavic 2 Zoom: A New Era For Camera Drones
Login
Welcome Guest. Please register or log in now.
Forgot your password?
Navigation
  • Home
  • Articles
  • News
  • Register/Login
  • Shopping
  • ASE Forums
  • Anime Threads
  • HardwareLogic
  • ASE Adnet
Latest News
  • Kingston HyperX Cloud 2 Pro Gaming Headset Unboxing
  • Synology DS415+ Unboxing
  • D-Link DCS-5020L Wireless IP Pan/Tilt IP Camera
  • Actiontec WiFi Powerline Network Extender Kit Unboxing
  • Durovis Dive Unboxing
  • Bass Egg Verb Unboxing
  • Welcome to the new server
  • Gmail Gets Optional Preview Pane
  • HBO Go on Consoles
  • HP Touchpad Update
Latest Articles
  • D-Link Exo AC2600 Smart Mesh Wi-Fi Router DIR-2660-US
  • HyperX Double Shot PBT Keys
  • Avantree ANC032 Wireless Active Noise Cancelling Headphones
  • ScharkSpark Beginner Drones
  • HyperX Alloy FPS RGB Mechanical Gaming Keyboard
  • D-Link DCS-8300LH Full HD 2-Way Audio Camera
  • Contour Unimouse Wireless Ergonomic Mouse
  • HyperX Cloud Alpha Pro Gaming Headset
  • Linksys Wemo Smart Home Suite
  • Fully Jarvis Adjustable Standing Desk
Latest Topics
  • Hello
  • Welcome to the new server at ASE Labs
  • Evercool Royal NP-901 Notebook Cooler at ASE Labs
  • HyperX Double Shot PBT Keys at ASE Labs
  • Avantree ANC032 Wireless Active Noise Cancelling Headphones at ASE Labs
  • ScharkSpark Beginner Drones at ASE Labs
  • HyperX Alloy FPS RGB Mechanical Gaming Keyboard at ASE Labs
  • D-Link DCS-8300LH Full HD 2-Way Audio Camera at ASE Labs
  • Kingston SDX10V/128GB SDXC Memory at ASE Labs
  • What are you listening to now?
  • Antec Six Hundred v2 Gaming Case at HardwareLogic
  • Sans Digital TR5UTP 5-Bay RAID Tower at HardwareLogic
  • Crucial Ballistix Smart Tracer 6GB PC3-12800 BL3KIT25664ST1608OB at HardwareLogic
  • Cooler Master Storm Enforcer Mid-Tower Gaming Case at HardwareLogic
  • Arctic M571-L Gaming Laser Mouse at ASE Labs
  • Contour Unimouse Wireless Ergonomic Mouse at ASE Labs
Advertisement
Advertisement
Press Release
  • Huntkey Has Launched Its New Power Strips with USB Chargers on Amazon US
  • Inspur Releases TensorFlow-Supported FPGA Compute Acceleration Engine TF2
  • Hot Pepper Introduces Spicy New Smartphones in US Markets
  • Sharp Introduces New Desktop Printers For The Advanced Office
  • DJI Introduces Mavic 2 Pro And Mavic 2 Zoom: A New Era For Camera Drones
  • DJI Introduces Mavic 2 Pro And Mavic 2 Zoom: A New Era For Camera Drones
  • Fujifilm launches "instax SQUARE SQ6 Taylor Swift Edition", designed by instax global partner Taylor Swift
  • Huawei nova 3 With Best-in-class AI Capabilities Goes on Sale Today
  • Rand McNally Introduces Its Most Advanced Dashboard Camera
  • =?UTF-8?Q?My_Size_to_Showcase_Its_MySizeId=E2=84=A2_Mobil?= =?UTF-8?Q?e_Measurement_Technology_at_CurvyCon_NYC?=
Home - ASE Publishing - About Us
© 2010 Aron Schatz (ASE Publishing) [Queries: 16 (8 Cached)] [Rows: 292 Fetched: 35] [Page Generation time: 0.010915040969849]