Welcome to Bookmarker!

This is a personal project by @dellsystem. I built this to help me retain information from the books I'm reading.

Source code on GitHub (MIT license).

Activity

You added a note
6 years, 11 months ago

tax profits proportionally to sales archive/dissertation

A potential fix would be to allocate the taxable profits made by multinationals proportionally to the amount of sales they make in each country.

Say Google’s parent company Alphabet makes $100 billion in profits globally, and 50 percent of its sales in the United States (a relatively similar sce…

The New York Times How Corporations and the Wealthy Avoid Taxes (and How to Stop Them) by Gabriel Zucman
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6 years, 11 months ago

Google's tax avoidance archive/dissertation

Under this arrangement, which as far as we know is still in place, it is Google Ireland Limited that actually licenses the tech of Google’s main business to all the Google affiliates in Europe, the Middle East and Africa. (Google has a similar offshoot in Singapore that covers business in Asia).

How Corporations and the Wealthy Avoid Taxes (and How to Stop Them) by Gabriel Zucman
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6 years, 11 months ago

tech owes a debt to the financial sector archive/dissertation

[...] The tech industry owes a huge debt to the financial sector. Wolfe is eager to depict Silicon Valley as the new New York, but much of the money that funds venture-capital firms comes from investors who made their fortunes on Wall Street. (The tech industry also owes a great debt to “Main Stree…

The Atlantic It’s Getting Harder to Believe in Silicon Valley by Anna Wiener
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6 years, 11 months ago

this is a spaceship, and we built it by ourselves archive/dissertation

If technology belongs to the people only insofar as the people are consumers, we beneficiaries had better believe that luminaries and pioneers did something so outrageously, so individually innovative that the concentration of capital at the top is deserved. When founders pitch their companies, or …

It’s Getting Harder to Believe in Silicon Valley by Anna Wiener
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6 years, 11 months ago

the shield of presumed harmlessness archive/dissertation

[...] Portraying Silicon Valley’s powerful as “uber-nerds” who struck it rich is as reductive and unhelpful as referring to technology that integrates personal payment information and location tracking as “little buttons.” The effect is not only to protect them behind the shield of presumed harmles…

It’s Getting Harder to Believe in Silicon Valley by Anna Wiener