T
Tiger5150
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@mike said in [The proposed News Meida Laws](/post/1305002) said:@tiger5150 said in [The proposed News Meida Laws](/post/1304999) said:@mike said in [The proposed News Meida Laws](/post/1304992) said:@tiger5150 said in [The proposed News Meida Laws](/post/1304990) said:@mike said in [The proposed News Meida Laws](/post/1304987) said:@jirskyr said in [The proposed News Meida Laws](/post/1304984) said:@tilllindemann said in [The proposed News Meida Laws](/post/1304960) said:It is so much easier to regulate a newspaper or tv channel with domestic legislation, compared to these global monopolies.
That's the part I don't know if folks really understand. The legislation appears to be less about "copyright" protection and more about managing monopolies.
The whole point of the ACCC finding is that Google and Facebook have developed themselves into a position where they monopolise things like ad revenue, media distribution etc.
I see all these comments saying "too bad, that's business", but that's such a naive position to take regarding emerging / entrenched monopolies.
Tax their revenue then, a bit like GST but more like the NSW gaming machine tax. Do that for every organisation that has multi billion dollar revenue, not just ones you don’t like.
What part of their revenue, *earned within Australia*, is not taxed? If my company places an ad/adwords/targetted marketing on Google or Facebook, I pay GST.
Yes but your company can offset that GST tax by the GST on purchases. You only actually pay the difference. That’s why I said more like the NSW gaming machine tax. It’s based on pure revenue and there are no offsets. Straight up tax on revenue received by the company.
Mike with respect, thats not how corporate tax works. No company in Australia pays tax on revenue. All revenue is offset by cost of goods sold, in effect company tax is tax on gross profit. Effectively the same as GST.
Google & Facebook, like any other company trading within Australia, pay GST on ***all*** of their sales which is ***ONLY*** offset by purchases of goods and services ***purchased in Australia*** so its a pretty good mechanism to get tax out (or at least money returned to the Aus economy) of a massive international company like FB/Google because they obviously have all of their international companies set up at a gross loss.
I know that’s not how it works now but neither is taxing hyperlinks. I know many companies set themselves up for gross loss.
I havent really been following this direct issue as closely as I should but is the intention to TAX Google/FB or force them to pay content creators?
But instead of changing the way the Internet works how about we fix the real tax issue instead.
Always room for real tax reform as long as it improves productivity. I am NOT a fan of taxing companies or industries differently though. Make one (set of) law and tax everyone the same.
Edit: But clubs and pubs in NSW pay tax now on gaming machine revenue, not profit or loss.
Because it is a ***State tariff*** and forms part of costs of goods sold and in effect is a deduction for **Federal** Company Tax