Six Top Tech Companies Weaseled Their Way Out of $100 Billion in Taxes, Study Finds

https://gizmodo.com/six-top-tech-companies-weaseled-their-way-out-of-100-b-1840177693

Tech companies don’t pay their taxes. Together, Amazon, Facebook, Google, Netflix, Apple, and Microsoft may have skipped out on over $100 billion in taxes they should have paid since 2010, according to a new report from the UK-based tax accreditation organization Fair Tax Mark. That’s enough to pay three million Americans the median per capita annual income, 14 percent of US annual spending on K-12 education, 500,000 US homes, a nearly two-million-foot stack of one dollar bills, 56 million square feet of Manhattan real estate, 50 billion cans of beans, nearly 1 billion years of Netflix… fill in as applies to you.

Generally, about half of what they were ostensibly obligated to pay under corporate tax rates came out of our pockets in subsidies and tax breaks, not to mention the immense stockpiles of cash they’re hoarding in havens in Bermuda, Ireland, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands, to list a few of the locations cited by Fair Tax Mark.

“Their accounts actually note vast unrepatriated income abroad and that they are now bringing these historical sums back post Trump’s Tax Cuts and Jobs Act 2017 at much-reduced rates,” Fair Tax Mark Chief Executive Paul Monaghan tells Gizmodo. Monaghan says that the companies don’t share information about income, profit, and tax across various countries, which “they should most definitely be disclosing.”

Fair Tax Mark’s report points to Apple’s long habit of shuffling its money around the world and forking it over only when regulators reign them in. In 2017, Apple agreed to pay $14.6 billion in unpaid taxes in 2017 to Ireland and has since racked up another tab of $14.3 billion by the EU’s count, which it does not plan to pay. And Apple successfully avoided paying $50 billion in taxes on untaxed cash stored abroad, bringing it home for Trump’s sweet one-time charge of $38 billion.

Fair Tax Mark concentrates on “cash taxes paid,” the actual amount of taxes paid after deductions and refunds, versus tax provisions, the amount companies estimate paying in their public financial reports, including deferred taxes which may or may not be paid in future. Note that the corporate income tax rate was 35 percent before the Trump administration cut it to 21 percent in 2017.

Their findings:

  • Amazon paid $3.4 billion in income taxes over the past decade, which amounts to 12.7% of profit over that time.
  • Facebook paid 10.2 percent of its profits since 2010, “at a time when the federal headline rate of tax in the United States was 35 percent for seven of the eight years under examination.”
  • Google has claimed that its “overall global tax rate has been over 23% for the past 10 years, in line with the 23.7% average statutory rate across the member countries of the OECD.” Fair Tax Mark finds that it has actually given 15.8 percent of its profits in cash tax paid.
  • Netflix also paid 15.8 percent on its profits, albeit it operates on very thin profit margins.
  • Apple, which, they note, “presents itself as ‘the world’s largest taxpayer” makes good on its word with a total payment of $93.8 billion in income taxes this decade. But the percentage of profits is still a measly 17.1 percent.
  • Microsoft “has the least aggressive approach to tax avoidance of the Six,” they write, paying $46.9 billion in income taxes, though that represents 16.8 percent of its profit.

Google, for one, does not interpret tax responsibilities this way. A spokesperson tells Gizmodo that Fair Tax Mark “ignores the reality of today’s complicated international tax system, and distorts the facts documented in our regulatory filings.” They continue: “Like other multinational companies, we pay the vast majority – more than 80% – of our corporate income tax in our home country. As we have said before, we strongly support the OECD’s work to end the current uncertainty and develop new tax principles.” When pressed to further address the relevant claims in the report, Google declined to comment.

That statement skirts around Fair Tax Mark’s point of contention, which is with Google’s statement about paying 23 percent in global, not US, taxes. “Google’s statement bears out our contention that the majority of the tax gap is probably playing out outside of the US,” Monaghan tells Gizmodo. “In recent years [less than] 50% of Google’s reported profits are ‘foreign’, but obviously not their taxes paid!”

For argument’s sake, I’ll focus on Amazon, which famously paid zero dollars in federal income tax in the US in 2017 and 2018, mainly due to tax breaks. Some economists (and politicians) argue that these are essential for economic growth; others stress that this is totally legal. Bernie Sanders calls this absurd.

Amazon argued in a statement to Gizmodo that it’s unfair for Fair Tax Mark to lump them in with “technology companies” with higher profit margins, as though Amazon isn’t a tech company. “Amazon is primarily a retailer where profit margins are low,” a spokesperson wrote, “so comparisons to technology companies with operating profit margins of closer to 50% is not rational.” (By “where,” the spokesperson said Amazon is referring to the “wider retail environment,” not location.) Amazon very much is a tech company, and Monaghan would like to note that Amazon Web Services accounts for over half of their profits. (It also offloads much of the overhead cost that traditional retailers must endure to third-party sellers.) Plus, Monaghan writes, Amazon’s claim that its fellows operate with 50 percent profit margins is false: “the margins of the others over the decade are Google (27%), Apple (30%), Microsoft (31%), Netflix (4.5%), Facebook (44%).”

It’s true that Amazon’s profit margin is low; as Bloomberg explains, it keeps it that way by investing in new warehouses it can write off and paying employees in stocks, on which it can claim deductions. It also leverages a research and development credit and tax breaks on previous losses, at which point, Bloomberg writes, “its U.S. corporate tax liability can be whittled down to zero.” Those losses, Fair Tax Mark notes, add up to a $9.3 billion exchequer which Amazon can put toward future taxes.

The Amazon spokesperson also stated that “Amazon represents about 1% of global retail with larger competitors everywhere we operate, and had a 24% effective tax rate on profits from 2010-2018 – neither ‘dominant’ nor ‘untaxed’.”

Monaghan would put the effective tax rate at 21.4 percent, but “[l]et’s say Amazon is right,” he argues: that figure is still intentionally misleading because it applies to funds Amazon reports earmarking for taxes, not what it actually pays. “In terms of money actually paid over – the ‘cash taxes paid’ – the number is 12.7% over the last decade. They do not dispute this number, but rather are misdirecting people to a larger, vaguer and different figure.” Monaghan says that Fair Tax Mark sent all of its figures to the six companies, none of which were disputed.

That still doesn’t address the issue of what companies should have paid. Sure, $3 billion in city and state subsidies for Amazon’s proposed New York headquarters could have been the “astounding return on investment” Bill de Blasio anticipated. But they’re playing with our money, and so far, Google’s New York campus hasn’t seemed to do much to alleviate New York’s human rights emergency. People are sleeping on the pavement, rents keep rising, and it’s freezing out here. Jeff Bezos could chip in a few billion now and then, with a hundred to spare.

Gizmodo has reached out to Netflix, Facebook, Apple, and Microsoft and will update the post if we hear back.

via Gizmodo https://gizmodo.com

December 3, 2019 at 03:15PM

Firefox gets picture-in-picture video playback on Windows

https://www.engadget.com/2019/12/03/firefox-pip-video-windows/

One of the hardest things to do while multitasking is watching a video. Even if you open a clip in a new window, you often have to keep moving it around your screen so it’s not blocked by all the clutter on your screen. Mozilla‘s new Picture-in-Picture feature for Firefox pins just about any video to your screen and prevents other tabs or windows from obscuring it.

Once you’ve downloaded the most recent version of Firefox, hover over a video and a blue "Picture-in-Picture" option will pop up. Click the button and the video will open in a solitary player that you can move around as needed. The feature is only available on the Windows version of the browser, but it will hit Mac and Linux versions in January, according to Mozilla.

firefox picture in picture video playback

While having a second monitor would probably be the nicest way to keep one eye on a video and the other on work tasks, that’s not an option for everyone, and would be next to impossible for laptop users on the go. Picture-in-Picture mode could be a good fallback. Just make sure you’ve got a quick trigger finger for when your boss walks by.

Source: Mozilla

via Engadget http://www.engadget.com

December 3, 2019 at 09:00PM

Plex launches its free movie and TV streaming service

https://www.engadget.com/2019/12/04/plex-free-streaming-service-movies-tv-shows/

We’ve known for a while that Plex, a company best known for helping people organize their own media collection, is getting into streaming. In September, it announced that it had teamed up with Warner Bros. to deliver ad-supported content by the end of 2019, with the promise of more partnerships to come. That has now come to pass, as from today, thousands of "free movies, TV shows, extreme sports films, music documentaries, Bollywood musicals" have been unlocked inside the Plex app.

The ad-supported video-on-demand service is available in more than 200 countries to anyone with a free Plex account. There’s no paid subscriptions, and it features content from major studios including Metro Goldwyn Mayer (MGM), Lionsgate, Legendary and, of course, Warner Bros. American Ultra, Frequency, Lord of War, Rain Man, Raging Bull, The Terminator, Thelma & Louise and Apocalypse Now all feature, with more movies set to be added in the future.

If you’re already a Plex user, a new Free to Watch category will be unlocked under a Movies & TV on Plex sidebar item, allowing you to position it alongside your existing collections. Much like the Tidal and Web Shows items, the new streaming option can also be removed if it isn’t to your liking. If you’ve never used Plex before, it has apps on all major smart TVs and streaming boxes, meaning you can add it to your console, Roku, Apple TV, Amazon Fire TV and Android TV boxes, as well as iOS and Android devices.

Plex’s new offering doesn’t come with a price, but it does come with ads. Even if you’re a Plex Pass subscriber, which unlocks numerous features for streaming and managing a personal collection, these new movies and TV shows will still be punctuated by ads. Plex says it will serve "only about one-third the amount of ads you’d expect on cable television" and that while some movies and TV shows will be geo-restricted, the "vast majority" of content will be available worldwide.

Plex Free Movies

"Plex was born out of a passion for media and entertainment, and offering free ad-supported premium movies and TV shows is just the latest step in our mission to bring all your favorite content together in one place," said Keith Valory, Plex CEO. "What started more than a decade ago as a passion project to make accessing media on connected devices easier has evolved into the most comprehensive streaming platform in the industry, used by millions of people around the world."

Source: Plex Free TV

via Engadget http://www.engadget.com

December 4, 2019 at 08:06AM

Netflix Is Testing a Shuffle Feature That Could Make Your Binges Even Lazier

https://gizmodo.com/netflix-is-testing-a-shuffle-feature-that-could-make-yo-1840155635

Series-binging sometimes means throwing on random reruns of a favorite series just to keep you occupied—it’s one of the great benefits of cord-cutting, after all. But the lack of a shuffle function on many popular platforms means you’re generally stuck committing to a season and starting from the top or cherry-picking what to watch next after each individual episode.

Netflix seems to realize the experience of randomly shuffling popular episodes for shows like Friends or The Office appeals to viewers who’d rather just put something on than hunt tirelessly for a new film or series to stream. And it’s been experimenting with adding a shuffle function for a while now, but Android Police recently spotted the shuffle function in a new overflow menu on shows in the Continue Watching section of the Netflix home screen.

In addition to the random shuffle feature, a screenshot from Android Police showed the menu offered several other playback functions too, including a button for getting information on it, another for finding similar content, and one to remove the content from the Continue Watching carousel—another useful feature for removing content from the section on mobile.

Netflix confirmed to Gizmodo that it’s running the test but noted that it runs these kinds of experiments “in different countries and for different periods of time—and only make them broadly available if people find them useful.”

Back in April, the streaming giant began testing a “Play a Popular Episode” carousel on the home screen within the Android app. The company confirmed the test to Gizmodo at the time but added that, as with other tests, the feature “may not become permanent.” But the presence of the shuffle feature means the company is at least toying with the idea of gifting users something close to the playback feature they so desire.

Netflix isn’t the only one who appears to be tuning in to the demands of users. After a charitably rocky launch last month, Disney+ has rightfully corrected some of its glaring playback problems, including by adding a Continue Watching section as well as a Resume function for picking up where you last left off on an individual episode.

Given that Disney+ now has all 30 seasons of The Simpsons live on its platform, a shuffle feature might also benefit the streaming newcomer. And that’s not totally out of the realm of possibility for a feature down the line. Disney-owned Hulu has a tags feature on Seinfeld, for example, that allows episodes to be sorted by popularity, relationships, and even a beginner’s guide.

As for Netflix, a shuffle function isn’t going to clean up Netflix’s mediocre selection. But it might make watching the few legacy shows it’s clutching onto like life rafts that much more enjoyable.

via Gizmodo https://gizmodo.com

December 3, 2019 at 12:57PM

Google Creates New Messaging Service, This Time Within Google Photos

https://www.droid-life.com/2019/12/03/google-creates-new-messaging-service-this-time-within-google-photos/

Google Photos Messenger

Remember when Google built a special, stand-alone messaging/sharing experience into YouTube only to kill it 2 years later? They are making that same play today within Google Photos.

Google Photos is getting an update that allows you to have private conversations within the app that you can share photos and videos through. You can comment, like, save, and continue adding photos to these conversations over time, giving you an ongoing chat with family and friends about your visual life.

You’ll access these by tapping the share button in a photo that then brings up a list of those conversations you have going. I’m assuming there will be another way to constantly get into these conversations without tapping that button too, we just don’t know yet as the update is slowly rolling out over the next week.

Is this a good idea as another Google messaging service? Well, we know the history there with Google and messaging services, but I can’t say I hate this. I share a lot of photos directly within Google Photos to family already, so this should help organize that better, allow everyone in these shares to chit chat a bit, etc.

Anyone got the countdown clock start for when this feature is retired?

// Google

via Droid Life: A Droid Community Blog https://ift.tt/2dLq79c

December 3, 2019 at 12:08PM

The most impressive aerospace innovations of 2019

https://www.popsci.com/story/technology/best-aerospace-innovations-2019/

The year's most important developments in the world of aerospace.

The year’s most important developments in the world of aerospace. (Lockheed Martin/)

All 100 innovations for Best of What’s New 2019, this way.


The most awesome aerospace innovations of this past year aren’t just cool contraptions designed to cruise through air and space at breakneck speeds. They’re hints at what might be mainstream in the future. From an experimental craft that could help usher in a new period of quiet supersonic flight to a drone destined to fly on Mars, these machines are made to push the edges of our engineering envelopes. These mind-bending vehicles are bringing wings, rotors, engines, and humanity to new heights.

A spacecraft that glides on sunlight.

A spacecraft that glides on sunlight. (Planetary Society/)

The LightSail 2—a 31-inch-tall satellite attached to a 18-foot-wide sail—reveals what spaceflight could look like by mid-century. Orbiting Earth since June at some 16,765 mph, the craft is fueled only by photons from the sun’s rays. The particles produce momentum as they bounce off the ultra-reflective, ultrathin Mylar (a better version of the stuff in space blankets). A virtual mission control will let people track LightSail’s trajectory until next August, when the craft will de-orbit and burn up in the atmosphere. The Planetary Society, which developed this tech in the early 2000s, hopes to see others improve on the concept so that one day it might be a low-cost, low-polluting propeller to destinations as close as the moon or as far as Alpha Centauri.

Satellites piggybacking on a jumbo jet.

Satellites piggybacking on a jumbo jet. (Virgin Orbit/)

Here’s a radical idea: Let’s swap in planes instead of traditional rockets to propel small satellites into orbit. To try this old-meets-new method, Virgin Orbit attached its flagship LauncherOne rocket to the left wing of a retrofitted Boeing 747. At 35,000 feet, the nearly 70-foot-long rocket detaches from the plane, fires its engines, and carries its payload to space—while the jet returns to the tarmac to fly another day. The $12 million cost is dramatically cheaper than fuel-intensive vertical flights (a SpaceX Falcon 9 launch, for example, runs around $57 million). LauncherOne should have its first formal test flight either this year or early next, and is already contracted for several commercial missions—including one to Mars.

Mapping with finesse.

Mapping with finesse. (Lockheed Martin/)

Your navigation apps run off a hodgepodge of satellites, the oldest of which dates to 1993. That will change when GPS Block III, developed by Lockheed Martin, takes over the skies. Compared to its predecessor, this modern fleet of at least 10 orbiters will be three times more accurate for civilian users, and, for the military, provide more powerful signals and eight times better anti-jamming capabilities. The crafts will also last 15 years—25 percent longer than the ones circling Earth right now. The first one launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida, in December 2018, and the second this past August. The third goes up early next year.

The most accurate timepiece in the galaxy.

The most accurate timepiece in the galaxy. (NASA/)

After 20 years of fine-tuning, the Deep Space Atomic Clock started ticking in August, kicking off its year-long orbit of the planet. Like atomic clocks before it, the timekeeper works by measuring stable and precise frequencies of light, in this case emitted from mercury molecules. The compact, 37-pound device is 50 times more stable than current atomic clocks, losing only one second every 10 million years. That sort of accuracy is helpful for studying the cosmos (it can calculate the distance between solar bodies by measuring the time it takes for a signal to travel between them) and crucial with space travel (one tiny blip could make a probe, or a colony of people, miss a destination by thousands of miles).

Touchdown on the far side of the moon.

Touchdown on the far side of the moon. (CNSA / CLEP/)

For the China National Space Administration, 2019 started with more of a whimper than a bang. Its Chang’e 4 lunar rover pulled off the first soft landing of any spacecraft on the far side of the moon in January (NASA had two impact crashes in 1962 and 2013). And the craft hasn’t stopped since: Just a couple of days after touchdown, Chang’e’s Yutu-2 rover trekked about 390 feet to analyze geological materials that could give us a better sense of how the moon evolved. More recently, it deployed its strangest payload: a Lunar Micro Ecosystem that sprouted cotton seeds in a small biosphere. The experiment lasted nine whole Earth days.

Trying to break the sound barrier, quietly.

Trying to break the sound barrier, quietly. (Lockheed Martin/)

It’s been nearly a half-century since the FAA banned supersonic civilian flights over land because of the telltale booms they produce. NASA and Lockheed Martin hope to reverse that with their X-59 QueSST aircraft, currently under construction in California. The 97-foot-long experimental plane will fly faster than sound, but its designers have engineered it to do so as quietly as possible. Typical supersonic aircraft create a sonic boom when shock waves from the nose and tail merge; because of the X-59’s distinctive shape, those two ripples never do that, so the resulting sound is more like far-away thunder or a dull thump. If the initial flight, scheduled for 2021, goes well, the jet could help pave the way for airplanes that cut flight times in half.

Fighter-pilot training for the iPad generation.

Fighter-pilot training for the iPad generation. (Boeing/)

Air Force pilots must master their gravity-busting skills before hopping into pricey front-line fighters like the F-35. Those crucial lessons take place in advanced trainer jets—tandem two-seaters where an instructor and student fly together. Boeing and Saab designed and built their latest version with some much-needed upgrades: Pilots in both the forward and aft cockpits, where the tutor typically sits, get touchscreens to access navigation and communications systems or information about the craft’s health—just as they would on many modern jets. The rear station rests higher than the one in front so the teacher can see over the student; and the plane can accommodate pilots of a wide range of sizes, making it a tool that any trainee can embrace.

The quadcopter with real zip.

The quadcopter with real zip. (Bell/)

Bell’s 6-foot-tall, 120-mph beast operates in a different manner than your standard drone. As usual, the APT 70 uses four propellers to rise into the air, but when it’s ready for horizontal flight, the entire craft pivots 90 degrees so that its two long sides become wings that hold roughly parallel to the ground, creating lift. The extra aerodynamic boost gives it a range of about 35 miles, well beyond the reach of smaller delivery craft, such as one from Amazon aiming for 15-mile trips. And with a cargo capacity of up to 70 pounds, the APT 70 has the heft to transport large goods like industrial components or medical supplies, as opposed to making small package drops in your yard.

Flight adapted for a distant atmosphere.

Flight adapted for a distant atmosphere. (NASA/)

No one has ever flown a plane on another planet. But with the mini Mars Helicopter, NASA is looking to blaze a new (con)trail in very foreign airspace. Engineers at the Jet Propulsion Lab designed the 4-pound chopper’s counter-rotating double blades to hover in an atmosphere that’s as thin as Earth’s stratosphere. Once it’s deployed in two years, NASA will use it to glean lessons on how to create more-autonomous flying machines for the Red Planet. Its cellphone-grade color camera might even send back pictures more vibrant than the grayscale ones from the Curiosity rover.

A lightning-fast chopper.

A lightning-fast chopper. (Sikorsky/)

Instead of relying on a regular tail rotor to keep it from spinning in circles, Sikorsky and Boeing’s SB>1 Defiant helicopter holds steady with a pair of 56-foot rigid carbon-fiber rotors that spin in opposite directions from each other. The chopper, which grew out of a long-running Sikorsky program known as “X2,” also boasts what’s called a pusher prop in the back—an addition that should let the bird hit 288 mph or more. That’s incredibly fast for choppers, which typically cruise around 150 mph. Someday craft like this could replace slower, old-school Black Hawks as they carry up to a dozen soldiers into combat.

via Popular Science – New Technology, Science News, The Future Now https://www.popsci.com

December 3, 2019 at 06:08AM

Riot Games pays $10 million to settle gender discrimination lawsuit

https://www.engadget.com/2019/12/03/riot-games-discrimination-lawsuit-settlement/

In August, Riot Games settled a class action lawsuit over gender discrimination and its sexist culture, though details of the settlement weren’t clear. Now according to new court documents seen by Los Angeles Times, the developer has agreed to pay at least $10 million to employees and contractors who identify as female and who’ve worked at the company over the last five years. Around 1,000 workers will be entitled to a payout from the pot, but the amount they’re getting will depend on how long they worked for the company. Full-time employees are also getting more money than contractors.

The League of Legends’ developer’s "men-first" and "bro" company culture was first brought to light by a Kotaku investigation, which described a sexist environment where women are routinely discriminated against. One former and one current employee then sued the company over violations of the California Equal Pay act, detailing a workplace wherein "crotch grabbing," "phantom humping" and "hot girl" lists allegedly go unpunished. The lawsuit, which gained class action status, also accused Riot Games of denying outspoken women promotions — even demoting them at times — and removing their benefits.

Earlier this year, a few months after the lawsuit was filed, more than 150 employees walked out to protest the motion Riot Games filed to force the plaintiffs into arbitration. Riot Games noted in the settlement documents that it has beefed up its internal reporting programs since then, hired a dedicated chief diversity officer and undertook a "review of all pay, promotion and hiring practices to increase fairness and transparency."

A Riot Games spokesperson told LA Times in a statement:

"We’re pleased to have a proposed settlement to fully resolve the class action lawsuit. The settlement is another important step forward, and demonstrates our commitment to living up to our values and to making Riot an inclusive environment for the industry’s best talent."

Source: Los Angeles Times

via Engadget http://www.engadget.com

December 3, 2019 at 02:24AM