Web Lawyer: Should you pay a business privilege tax on your blog?

Web lawyer taxesThe City of Philadelphia is chasing down local bloggers and telling them they have to (1) fork over 300 bucks for a business privilege license plus (2) pay back taxes on their earnings. And if they can’t afford that lifetime license fee, they’re supposed to spend 50 bucks every year that they operate their blogs.

Many of the bloggers have made little or no money and consider their blogs to be hobbies instead of businesses. That makes hiring a Web lawyer or tax attorney to fight the government difficult.

Why is this issue important to you?

With the U.S. federal government being insolvent (liabilities exceed assets) and many state (including California, New York, and Illinois) and local governments in the same capsized boat, the Internet looks like a fat pig to roast for new taxes to feed the public sector.

Be sure you’re complying with applicable laws when running your blogs and websites in general.

One of the biggest mistakes online entrepreneurs make is operating their businesses the wrong way from an asset protection and tax standpoint. Talk with your Web lawyer about how to avoid this deadly trap that could cost you everything.

To your online success!

-Mike the Web lawyer

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Web Lawyer: If 73,000 blogs fall in cyberspace, do they make a sound?

Web lawyer blogBlogetry.com was a place you could set up a blog for free.

Unfortunately, for 73,000 bloggers, that “free” disappeared on July 9 when Blogetry’s web host closed every blog. The reason? Although the details are still murky, it seems that the U.S. government stepped in and forced the closure.

As both a blogger and a Web lawyer, I find it scary to think of the government shutting down so many blogs at once. Some believe the shutdown was because some blogs were illegally sharing copyrighted content. That remains to be seen.

What is clear is that there is no free lunch.

If you have a blog, consider using paid hosting with your own domain rather than using some free hosting service. Make regular backups so you can port the blog elsewhere in case of a shutdown.

And make sure your domain name is registered somewhere different than your hosting company. If your domain registrar and host are the same, you’ll catch hell trying to point the domain name to a new host when setting up your blog at a new location.

To your online success!

-Mike the Web lawyer

P.S. My Website Legal Forms Generator software creates a DMCA notice so that anyone who thinks you have illegally copyrighted materials has all the information they need to deal with you directly rather than going straight to your web host or the government.

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Federal Trade Commission: Bloggers’ Gift Disclosure Policy

The Federal Trade Commission guidelines covering endorsements and testimonials went into effect on December 1, 2009. How they will be enforced in real life against website owners and bloggers won’t fully be clarified for years as the FTC and the courts make decisions on a case-by-case basis.

Fortunately, the Federal Trade Commission did act on April 20, 2010 in a case involving bloggers who received gifts. What happened is that some bloggers who wrote about a certain event held by a women’s clothing store chain received small gifts.

Because of this compensation, the Federal Trade Commission investigated. Here’s the key sentence from the FTC to the chain’s lawyer…

“Depending on the circumstances, an advertiser’s provision of a gift to a blogger for posting blog content about an event could constitute a material connection that is not reasonably expected by readers of the blog.”

In this case, the Federal Trade Commission decided not to penalize the store chain. Several factors for this decision were (a) some of the bloggers did disclose they had received gifts, (b) not many bloggers participated, (c) the company created a written policy in February that required bloggers to disclose on their blogs any gifts they received from the company.

Here’s the important thing to remember. The FTC’s attorney made it clear that the Federal Trade Commission expected the company to (1) obey this written policy of requiring gift disclosure, and (2) monitor bloggers to ensure they complied with the policy by disclosing the gifts.

Material connections that must be disclosed can include many things in addition to gifts. For example, promoting as an affiliate in exchange for commissions would be a material connection.

Note that the Website Legal Forms Generator software was updated (Version 2.0) based on these new Federal Trade Commission guidelines and includes a disclosure policy. To claim your copy, click here right now.

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