Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror

Submission + - Maryland To Become First State To Tax Online Ads Sold By Facebook And Google. (npr.org)

schwit1 writes: With a pair of votes, Maryland can now claim to be a pioneer: it's the first place in the country that will impose a tax on the sale of online ads.

The House of Delegates and Senate both voted this week to override Gov. Larry Hogan's veto of a bill passed last year to levy a tax on online ads. The tax will apply to the revenue companies like Facebook and Google make from selling digital ads, and will range from 2.5% to 10% per ad, depending on the value of the company selling the ad. (The tax would only apply to companies making more than $100 million a year.)

Proponents say the new tax is simply a reflection of where the economy has gone, and an attempt to have Maryland's tax code catch up to it. The tax is expected to draw in an estimated $250 million a year to help fund an ambitious decade-long overhaul of public education in the state that's expected to cost $4 billion a year in new spending by 2030. (Hogan also vetoed that bill, and the Democrat-led General Assembly also overrode him this week.)

Still, there remains the possibility of lawsuits to stop the tax from taking effect; Maryland Attorney General Brian Frosh warned last year that "there is some risk" that a court could strike down some provisions of the bill over constitutional concerns.

Comment Re:All is proceeding as David Brin has foretold (Score 1) 78

My problem with this scenario is the same as with gun ownership: it can work, if the access to technology is more or less equal, but too much inequality in the distribution is undemocratic, causes too much imbalance in power. Like when a few economically and physically capable persons can hoard quality weapons while most of the public is left with grandpa's shotgun. In the theoretical situation, when armed citizens resist something they consider tyranny, the outcome of the struggle depends on who is better armed/prepared for fight, not who is right. All that said, that surveillance by citizens would be better, than the situation of today, where only businesses and authorities have their cameras in public places.

Comment It's not UBI (Score 1) 136

Firstly, this one is not really universal basic income, as the recipient families are selected. The fundamental idea of UBI is that *everyone* gets a certain amount of cash (or more likely credit), regardless if that one is a billionaire or a homeless person. Taxation (flat or progressive) doesn't disappear. Secondly, it's not just a leftist/sjw/marxist/reptilian-hillary-conspirator idea. Friedrich Hayek supported such a scheme himself.

Submission + - Tesla Wins Lawsuit Against Whistleblower Accused of Hacks (cnet.com)

An anonymous reader writes: The US District Court of Nevada awarded Tesla a win in its lawsuit against a former employee, filed two years ago. You may recall CEO Elon Musk referred to this incident in a previously leaked email calling on employees to be "extremely vigilant." Martin Tripp, who worked at the company's Nevada Gigafactory, was accused of hacking the automaker and supplying sensitive information to unnamed third parties. Reuters reported Friday the court ruled in Tesla's favor and dismissed Tripp's motion to file another reply to the court. Tesla did not immediately respond to a request for comment, but according to Reuters, the court will grant Tesla's motion to seal the case.

Submission + - DuckDuckGo Is Growing Fast (bleepingcomputer.com)

An anonymous reader writes: DuckDuckGo, the privacy-focused search engine, announced that August 2020 ended in over 2 billion total searches via its search platform. While Google remains the most popular search engine, DuckDuckGo has gained a great deal of traction in recent months as more and more users have begun to value their privacy on the internet. DuckDuckGo saw over 2 billion searches and 4 million app/extension installations, and the company also said that they have over 65 million active users. DuckDuckGo could shatter its old traffic record if the same growth trend continues. Even though DuckDuckGo is growing rapidly, it still controls less than 2 percent of all search volume in the United States. However, DuckDuckGo's growth trend has continued throughout the year, mainly due to Google and other companies' privacy scandal.

Submission + - Why passenger jets could soon be flying in formation (cnn.com)

ragnar_ianal writes: Look at the V-shaped formations of migrating ducks and scientists have long surmised that there are aeronautical efficiencies at play. Aerbus is examining this in a practical manner to see if fuel efficiency can be enhanced.

Building on test flights in 2016 with an Airbus A380 megajet and A350-900 wide-body jetliner, fello'fly hopes to demonstrate and quantify the aerodynamic efficiencies while developing in-flight operational procedures. Initial flight testing with two A350s began in March 2020. The program will be expanded next year to include the involvement of Frenchbee and SAS airlines, along with air traffic control and air navigation service providers from France, the UK, and Europe.

"It's very, very different from what the military would call formation flight. It's really nothing to do with close formation," explained Dr. Sandra Bour Schaeffer, CEO of Airbus UpNext, in an interview with CNN Travel.

Comment Re:Consider the writers and their sources (Score 1) 175

Actually, two or three are the required minimum for unnamed sources. The problem might be, that the article leans on those sources to channel an opinion about a person. Though the cited sources don't state directly the implied opinion themselves (which is a big no-no in more serious media especially if it's a negative opinion), the end result is the same. So the authors got through a questionable sentence without breaking their ethical code of conduct (I'm sure Reuters has such a thing).

Comment Capitalism is a marxist idea (mod parent up) (Score 1) 291

The word "capitalism" and "capitalist mode of production" was made popular by Marx, who also associated exploitation by capitalists (the workers get less wage than the value of their work) with it. Only problems are, it's still unclear what is the real value of a given amount and type of work, and that definition of exploitation can be fit to a number of other economic systems, which are generally not called capitalism. "Capitalism" feels to me a mishy-mashy expression perfect to be thrown around by politicians (from left and right) and other public figures eager to sell their social ideas, but it won't make those ideas clearer (perhaps that's the point).

Slashdot Top Deals

May Euell Gibbons eat your only copy of the manual!

Working...