See also: http://fusion.net/story/287592/internet-mapping-glitch-kansa...
I think the article on this, explains why a memory reduction by garbage collection also increases execution speed: http://derickrethans.nl/collecting-garbage-performance-consi...
Certainly, but I doubt it's very enforcable.
And on top of that, you can be audited by each EU country's tax authority as well... something I have not seen too many people worried about. I think it's an important thing that is being overlooked.
I don't think this law was actually pushed for by the UK. And countries like Hungary where VAT is 27% have much more to gain by it.
It doesn't matter. Any company selling digital services in the EU need to follow the new VAT rules. Including US companies, and of course Swiss ones.
You can buy from a non-EU company just fine. But other than that, there are other allowed bits of information to proof country of consumption, it's just going to be a pain to implement in your check-out process :-/
MOSS doesn't solve the difficult requirements for proving in which country a customer lives - providing they don't have a VAT number of course.
"Amazon do not abuse it, they just run shop from an EU country with low VAT rate (Luxembourg) last I checked." They "abuse" it from the point of view from the countries where they don't pay the VAT.... f.e. the UK would…
Über-pedantry: It's "you're" and not "your".
Actually, there is a lot of difference but not just because of the global lock to database lock transition. There is also a lot of work done on yield-before-lock:…
See also: http://fusion.net/story/287592/internet-mapping-glitch-kansa...
I think the article on this, explains why a memory reduction by garbage collection also increases execution speed: http://derickrethans.nl/collecting-garbage-performance-consi...
Certainly, but I doubt it's very enforcable.
And on top of that, you can be audited by each EU country's tax authority as well... something I have not seen too many people worried about. I think it's an important thing that is being overlooked.
I don't think this law was actually pushed for by the UK. And countries like Hungary where VAT is 27% have much more to gain by it.
It doesn't matter. Any company selling digital services in the EU need to follow the new VAT rules. Including US companies, and of course Swiss ones.
You can buy from a non-EU company just fine. But other than that, there are other allowed bits of information to proof country of consumption, it's just going to be a pain to implement in your check-out process :-/
MOSS doesn't solve the difficult requirements for proving in which country a customer lives - providing they don't have a VAT number of course.
"Amazon do not abuse it, they just run shop from an EU country with low VAT rate (Luxembourg) last I checked." They "abuse" it from the point of view from the countries where they don't pay the VAT.... f.e. the UK would…
Über-pedantry: It's "you're" and not "your".
Actually, there is a lot of difference but not just because of the global lock to database lock transition. There is also a lot of work done on yield-before-lock:…