this post was submitted on 24 Feb 2025
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Think of it on the flipside. If I make a website, I don't control who accesses it, and if I run ads or something, figuring out where that revenue is coming from is quite difficult. It can be done, but if I have to pay taxes to a hundred different countries, that's quite the burden.
I don't know how DSTs work in practice, but ideally we'd just discourage ads in general. Paying taxes on actual transactions (sub fees and whatnot) is easy, and ads suck.
Since all countries have long traditions in requiring that from a business, it doesn't matter if it's difficult or not.
It den essentially requires user tracking, no? Or some complex IP-based guesswork?
Maybe it's tractable for larger businesses, I'm more thinking of smaller players who don't have billions in revenue.
These taxes usually have minimum revenue requirements that smaller players wouldn't meet. Canada's DST requires at least $20m in Canadian digital services revenue and €750m in global revenue.
Is that pretty consistent? There are dozens of countries with laws like this.
The OECD has been working on an agreement that will probably include standards, but Canada and other countries got tired of waiting.