19 comments

  • bilekas 1 hour ago
    > The agency has lost more than a quarter of its staff, withdrawn directives to auditors to crack down on aggressive tax shelters and permitted other auditing efforts to falter.

    When you see a government doing this, you know they're not interested in collecting Tax from their rich buddies.

    This case will sit in limbo for 20x years.

    • yellow_lead 1 hour ago
      Or they'll settle with Meta in a few years for a small fee with no admission of wrongdoing to save face.
    • reactordev 1 hour ago
      Exactly. This is just one big tech fighting another big tech using the government as a weapon.
    • mothballed 1 hour ago
      >..withdrawn directives to auditors to crack down on aggressive tax shelters..

      The above might be a salient point, but as for the 1/4 auditors lost and the rest:

      The low income (under 25k) with EITC, were the largest audited group with 298,485 of 626,204 audits performed in 2022. The rest of those earning under 200k had 250,391 audits.[] 48% of audits were under 25k income w/ EITC. 87% of audits were people under 200k income.

      Kind of interferes with the idea these audits were all about going after the "rich buddies." They were way more about going after the poor than they were about going after the rich.

      [] IRS management audit reports obtained via FOIA by via TRAC / https://tracreports.org/reports/706/

      • hnburnsy 1 hour ago
        This has been debunked as these are just data matching audits as EITC is full of fraud with an estimated 30% of over claiming and improper payments by taxpayers.
        • mothballed 58 minutes ago
          Even if you change the view to it's mostly the poor who are the tax scammers it doesn't degrade the counterpoints that these auditors were by far mostly going after the middle class and poor -- you're just asserting the poors are *disproportionately tax cheats that perhaps deserve it.

          *edit: since my words were take in bad faith

          • hnburnsy 45 minutes ago
            They wrote a program years ago to data match EITC, little to no extra manpower from the IRS is needed, that is the point.
          • fwipsy 44 minutes ago
            I think you're strawmanning a bit. They're not saying poor people are tax cheats, just that tax cheats tend to be poor. This makes sense for the same reasons other types of crime are also associated with poverty. This is not to say that wealthy people do not also evade taxes, but they do so in ways that are harder to catch and prosecute. You're implying that going after poor people is some sort of classist discrimination but I think it's far more likely that there are good reasons for it.
      • jcarreiro 1 hour ago
        There are many, many more tax returns filed by people earning under 200k adjusted gross income than those earning more, I assume. So if there's a uniform chance that a return is audited, we would expect most audits to be done on returns under that threshold.

        Of course, it may not make sense to select returns uniformly at random for audits...

        • ryandrake 23 minutes ago
          Also, if tax cheating is uniform across the population, then the statement "there are more tax cheats earning under 200k" is true but wildly misleading, since "there are more taxpayers earning under 200k" is also true.
        • mothballed 1 hour ago
          Nowhere near 48% of the population earns enough wages for EITC but still under 25k. It's way way way way overrepresented in audits. Nearly half of the audits are aimed at the poorest workers.

          ------- re: below due to throttling-----------

          .... they were audits according to IRS. This is from the FOIA'd audit numbers from IRS via TRAC.

          • oklahomasports 40 minutes ago
            They are not audits. They are automated notices to idiots trying to claim the same child tax credit in multiple returns or hiding income(not reporting their w2 lol) to claim the EITC
            • buttercraft 28 minutes ago
              In other words, understaffed agency goes for the low hanging fruit
      • mikestew 1 hour ago
        Kind of interferes with the idea these audits were all about going after the "rich buddies."

        I think you misread the parent comment, who said exactly the opposite.

      • idontwantthis 46 minutes ago
        Biden and democrats increased funding in order to have the resources to go after rich offenders and they were doing it successfully and earning more than it cost, but Trumpublicans immediately rescinded it. It’s all public record go look for it.
        • mothballed 44 minutes ago
          Yet they refused to codify the "promise" it wouldn't be used for under 400k income families. Look at what they do, not what they say. In public they make 'promises' but in statute it turns into ether, meanwhile real audit data pointing to otherwise.

          -------- re: below due to throttling ------

          >I'm very confused about where you're going with this. Are you upset that too many rich people are getting audited, or that tax cheats under 400k income might also get audited?

          ... this was a direct response to parent stating increased funding was added specifically for going after rich people. Yes I would be upset if I was told they were adding new funding specifically to go after rich tax cheats but then turns out to be something like "welp actually we refuse to codify that or make anything binding that it will be used for those purposes, but for the cameras we will pinky swear it will be used for that and please don't look at the historical data for inferences."

          • idiotsecant 31 minutes ago
            I'm very confused about where you're going with this. Are you upset that too many rich people are getting audited, or that tax cheats under 400k income might also get audited?
    • lenerdenator 1 hour ago
      Ayup. Trump was able to get a stay on a case on an "allegedly" improperly-applied tax write-off for his casino's bankruptcy. It's been in limbo at least since 2016. Ten years. This is the standard operating procedure for people at that level of wealth.

      Which would suggest that perhaps that level of wealth doesn't need to exist in our society.

    • spiderfarmer 1 hour ago
      At what point does the term “regime” become an accurate description of that government rather than a derogatory label?
      • p_j_w 23 minutes ago
        When their agents execute people in the street with no repercussions.
  • siliconc0w 14 minutes ago
    If Corporates can offshore their IP I should be able to offshore my likeness and rent it back to myself to reduce my personal taxes.
  • masfuerte 1 hour ago
    > contending the company lowballed the price of trademarks, customer agreements, software licenses and other rights it moved offshore

    At the same time they were telling HMRC (the British tax authority) that IP rights, etc. were incredibly valuable and a significant cost of doing business (in the form of payments back to the mothership), and that's why they made very little profit in the UK and didn't need to pay much tax.

    • rolandog 15 minutes ago
      Ah, the next level in determining Schrodinger's cat's outcome is if the detector measures Zuckerberg's profit taxability instead of radiation decay; the measurement's results depend on who is carrying them out, where they've taken place and, in all instances, the cat kills itself due to our inability to fix the crazy rich-favoring taxation systems.
    • moomin 1 hour ago
      I see a very funny fight on our hands.
  • zoobab 14 minutes ago
    I wrote about this 20 years ago:

    http://digital-majority.wikidot.com/forum/t-5766/software-pa...

    In the meantime, Ireland removed their 0% tax over patent royalties, but Holland kept it at 0%.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_Irish_arrangement

  • mitchbob 3 hours ago
    > The agency is using real-world profit data to challenge how big companies value offshore intellectual property.

    https://archive.ph/2026.02.24-124153/https://www.nytimes.com...

    • btown 46 minutes ago
      Worth noting that this archive site has allegedly manipulated snapshotted content: https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2026/02/wikipedia-bans-a...
      • erikerikson 12 minutes ago
        From your link:

        > The Wikipedia guidance points out that the Internet Archive and its website, Archive.org, are “uninvolved with and entirely separate from archive.today.”

        Isn't archive.ph associated with .org?

    • notyourwork 1 hour ago
      Probably less about tax revenue and more about the executive branch squeezing tech companies to assert influence.
      • bonsai_spool 1 hour ago
        > Probably less about tax revenue and more about the executive branch squeezing tech companies to assert influence.

        Absolutely not about this, as is clearly reported in the linked article.

        • notyourwork 1 hour ago
          Because the article said so? That’s your rationale for saying the executive branch isn’t weaponizing the rest of government offices for their own influence and benefit. Sorry, color me unconvinced until this administration shows good faith.
          • bonsai_spool 1 hour ago
            > Because the article said so?

            Because... the article clearly says the case began under the FORMER administration, and goes further to say that it's not clear whether the CURRENT administration is going to drop the case.

            • ryandrake 18 minutes ago
              Am I the only one who thinks it's totally bonkers that a lawsuit can outlast a 4 year presidential administration? I mean, I get it, court cases can be complex, but what on earth could they be continuously doing for four years? I would love to see an hour by hour accounting of the time actually spent by humans on a case like this. My guess is that it's like a poorly run software project: mostly empty, where Person X is blocked waiting on the output of Person Y for weeks, and so on.
      • ambicapter 1 hour ago
        I doubt the current executive branch has enough brain trust to understand these sort of tactics.
        • lenerdenator 1 hour ago
          "Trump's stupid" is how we got here. You don't need to be smart to get where he is. You just have to have the willingness to engage in shady business practices, have enough money to outlast opponents in a courtroom, and exist in a society where there's no real pressure on people who do those things.
  • mrbluecoat 1 hour ago
    > I.R.S. auditors have been pursuing Meta for about a decade

    Soon: "I.R.S. auditors have been pursuing Meta for about [a decade + length of current administration term]"

  • mcs5280 1 hour ago
    Surely Zuckerberg's bribe check is in the mail already
    • kotaKat 52 minutes ago
      The "check" is what's given for a political favor and the "balance" is what goes up once the check clears.

      Simple enough lesson to me!

    • mentalgear 1 hour ago
      You mean send to one of Trumpo's milliard Crypto *hitcoins, just like civilised nations like the UAE, Russia or the saudis do it?
      • dylan604 50 minutes ago
        You're brave enough to post about Trump, yet chicken*hit enough to not type out the word shit? What standards are you setting for yourself?
  • amelius 28 minutes ago
    IRS is using AI now too.
  • raw_anon_1111 1 hour ago
    With the way that Zuckerberg both kisses up to and has bribed the current administration by “settling lawsuits”, this won’t go anywhere.
  • blinding-streak 1 hour ago
  • ur-whale 20 minutes ago
  • numbers_guy 1 hour ago
    The less they tax corporations the more the burden will fall on income tax. These big multinationals have been defrauding countries worldwide for decades. The issue is at the core of the political turmoil we are experiencing.

    I'd like to know how much less income tax would be, if we could tax multinationals properly.

    • which 40 minutes ago
      The tax avoidance schemes used by most major US companies are to avoid US taxes on foreign income. Most developed countries have territorial tax systems so their companies do not even need to use these fancy legal maneuvers because the income is largely exempt anyways.

      In any given year corporate income tax is like 6-10% of federal receipts so even if that was doubled there would not be a huge decline in income taxes needed. The way the US does corporate tax is really also not that great from an economic perspective because it is a form of double taxation. The Estonian model of only taxing distributions incentivizes investment and avoids many debates over depreciation etc.

    • erfgh 55 minutes ago
      The income tax would be less but so would be your salary. The corporate tax is another cost for the company.
  • raverbashing 1 hour ago
    I wonder how much Meta wrote off with their Metaverse adventure
    • Nevermark 1 hour ago
      Well that was a 100% certifiably genuine ridiculous loss.

      It is interesting how corporations develop personalities, that can do some things well but reliably fail at others. No matter the funding, personnel or efforts. And in this case, by developing a personality I mean enabling Zuck.

    • rwmj 1 hour ago
      If it wasn't every last penny of their spend then they weren't being honest with themselves.
  • ck2 58 minutes ago
    We cannot tariff our way out of debt by taxing consumption by individuals just needing to eat and live

    Billionaires silo-ing massive wealthy beyond multiple lifetimes must pay their taxes

    and Trillionaire corporations

    Each state now has several Billionaires, there are almost 1,000 in the USA

    They need to pay their damn taxes, a flat tax without deductions for everything over a million dollars of income per year

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_U.S._states_by_the_num...

    https://worldpopulationreview.com/state-rankings/most-billio...

    • trollbridge 28 minutes ago
      Note that the issue at hand here is almost entirely about corporations earning money overseas and then trying to "import" the money back into the U.S. whilst dodging taxes. It's quite germane to the same concept as tariffs, although not the exact same thing.
    • timacles 39 minutes ago
      Get ready for a lot more billionaires and a lot more poor people in the next 5-10 years
  • josefritzishere 1 hour ago
    Tax evasion is so pervasive at large companies that I have come to the conclusion that we need to start criminally charging the c-suite. Without personal consequences they're never going to change.
  • techpulse_x 1 hour ago
    [dead]
  • dfxm12 1 hour ago
    The agency has lost more than a quarter of its staff, withdrawn directives to auditors to crack down on aggressive tax shelters and permitted other auditing efforts to falter.

    Remember the fear mongering ads [0] Republicans ran during the 2022 midterms about arming IRS agents to act as a shadow army to go after every day law abiding people? As it turns out, Republicans were just talking about their own plans for ICE. Remember, every accusation from Republicans is an admission. Additionally, they don't care about crime, as they are specifically turning a blind eye to rich people and corporations breaking the law.

    0 - https://www.cbsnews.com/news/republicans-87000-irs-agents-mi...

  • b112 1 hour ago
    Solution (for big corp)?

    Mega is big enough to buy entire islands, and be its own country. A corporate country. One with a very specific constitution, enshrining rights, but also?

    No corporate taxes.

    If done right, you could lure away Western judges, police, and more as they retire. Or retire early. You could lure them away not with high salaries, but with shorter work days, AI assistance, and with it being a tropical paradise.

    Compared to the billions Meta would pay in taxes annually, this endeavour would be far cheaper. And citizens would still pay taxes, of course.

    Now imagine if Google, Musk Corps, Meta, and others all created a consortium to do just this, and, to build and fund the initial island.

    I agree, not fully plausible. But... these guys can do a lot of interesting things, and I think if it was truly a tropical paradise, and land and housing was cheap and aplenty, lots might be interested in moving there.

    Certainly, hiring the "glue" of society would be easy. I know so many people who retire to third world nations, but anyhow...

    Yes, holes but, maybe something to ponder.

    Corporate towns have existed, why not corporate nations?

    edit:

    As I've said elsewhere, it's -20C outside my door, so a tropical paradise with cheap housing and flying cars, and AGI and beaches and free coconuts may be masking my thoughts a bit.

    So downvote me, as you are. It burns, but by god it's -20C outside so that's just fine.

    (warms hands over burning post)

    • pjc50 0 minutes ago
      This is basically describing the Cayman Islands.

      The problem with this warm Galt Gulch idea is that someone has to do the actual work, and if the top level government is just a corrupt sinecure designed to shield the corporation from actually paying taxes, then nothing works properly. Comfortable island living is also surprisingly expensive, you have to import everything.

    • trollbridge 27 minutes ago
      Operating a military, maintaining positive diplomatic relations with other countries, and keeping your workforce pacified might be more expensive than you think.

      Not to mention that a lot of people prefer to live in a democracy instead of a giant company town, unless you compensate them really, really, well, and even then, well-heeled people are notorious for starting revolutions.

    • dctoedt 34 minutes ago
      > Mega is big enough to buy entire islands, and be its own country. A corporate country. One with a very specific constitution, enshrining rights, but also?

      It's a charming thought. But it can't possibly survive the brute reality that the world is full of people with guns, planes, drones, boats/ships, missiles, etc., who feel entitled to call the shots, and sometimes to take whatever they can from whomever they can.

    • laylower 1 hour ago
      This would not work. Investors are still based in actual countries. Jurisdictions will also always have the ability to tax a % of revenue at source / where it was generated and not on profit rolled up through spvs to a couple low tax havens ;)
    • chii 1 hour ago
      > Corporate towns have existed, why not corporate nations?

      because they dont need to do that. They can already obtain what they want with smaller tax havens that have already established trade/tax treaties, have existing facilities, infrastructures, etc.

      • b112 1 hour ago
        This whole article is about "not anymore that way". So now we need a new way. A way where it isn't -20C this morning outside my door, OK?
    • avmich 1 hour ago
      > Corporate towns have existed, why not corporate nations?

      Will those nations survive Maduragate? Won't in essence it make easier to deal with if they aren't under souvereign law, only international?

    • zf00002 54 minutes ago
      Snow Crash's Franchise-Organized Quasi-National Entities.
    • floatrock 1 hour ago
      Sounds easier to just buy a few congressmen and a circuit judge or two.
      • b112 1 hour ago
        Listen my friend. It's -20C outside my house, so I'll kindly ask you to allow this fantasy to continue unabated in my mind, OK? A tech haven, filled with flying cars, and AGI, and warm sandy beaches, and...
    • TacticalCoder 1 hour ago
      One question is: does the US wants to keep its big tech leader ship or not? Thankfully for the US the EU is nowhere in tech (biggest market cap is SAP and it's tiny compared to the US giants). But China is becoming big and quickly.

      RAM makers are going to feel the heat from China soon. Batteries makers. China is eating the world with its EVs. Drones, etc.

      If you're not nice with your corporations, they incorporate elsewhere: that's why the EU is nowhere in tech. Insane taxes since forever and a very strong anti-entrepreneurship mindset (in the EU you're a loser if you tried and fail, for example).

      Companies like Meta, Google, MSFT, Apple, etc. should receive medals and thanks from the US government for the insane amount of money they syphon of the other countries and the wealth they create for the US.

      Some countries are understanding this: in the UAE for example Dubai is now the world's busiest airport in the world for international passenger traffic. Some countries really fucked up big times to allow this to happen. Dubai is also now a very important hub for commodities trading. And diamonds: Antwerpen/Anvers (Belgium) used to be the city where the most diamonds exchanged hands, now it's... Dubai.

      There is such a thing as competition between nation states and at some point entrepreneurs simply pick the best place to launch their businesses. And having the IRS using "tactics" to say that Meta owes them tens of billions does not send a nice message to people wondering in which country it's best to incorporate.

      I now live in the country with the 2nd or 3rd highest GDP per capita in the world and that requires a mindset where businesses are welcome, entrepreneurs are welcome and the IRS doesn't feel like they're out there to get you at any cost.

      And I'm here because I voted with my feet, my wealth and the future wealth I was going to create.

      • hirako2000 43 minutes ago
        Everything in correct. But one omission there is politics. People occupy nations and don't all have the same interest. Those (felt, or actually) left aside, not benefiting enough from the macro growth speak and act in their interest.

        The people in the E.U arguably are more successful at getting their demands met. They typically are less fooled by the "American dream", they see Zuckerberg and the others for what they are, a tiny number of lucky, or privileged, sometimes just very gifted unicorns, the extreme majority won't make it so they want social welfare, this tax.

        The IRS going after big corp may simply be the result of this MAGA movement, which underneath really is just a popular uprise for the little guy to get a slice of the lie.

        Of course the current head of state is a master manipulator so this news may just be fluff to make his electorate happy

      • Nevermark 1 hour ago
        There is being hospitable to startups, and there is being hospitable to massive corporate giants.

        Turns out there is a big difference in what “hospitable” actually means in these two cases. Although the tech giants don’t want people to think so. They work hard to keep up their “scrappy” underdog patinas.

        I am not for punishing any organization for being successful, or for being big. But actual neutral tax parity, for the middle class up, would be good. The rich have so many tax-not-neutral alternate ways to do the same thing, but with lower or no taxes, it is ridiculous.

        Progressive taxation isn’t effective for the most part. And when it is, the high disparity in application is its own kind of unfairness.

        But inescapable neutral tax treatment would remove so many high paying financial, legal and lobbying jobs. Who would subsidize political careers if we eliminated that work, and cut of those perverse incentives? Not a likely scenario.

  • ceramati 1 hour ago
    This is one of those situations where I hope both parties duke it out to the maximum extent and completely obliterate each other.