Windy City Takes on Cloud: New Tax on Streaming Media, SaaS and PaaS

By

In a bold and controversial move, the city of Chicago instituted a new cloud tax today that will target online databases as well as popular streaming media services like Netflix and Spotify. The tax is designed to recoup some of the sales tax that has gone missing as consumers shift their spending away from brick-and-mortar stores to digital services. But the way the tax is being instituted raises a number of questions and has gotten the legal community up in arms.

Image via Shutterstock

The new tax is based on two recent rulings from the Chicago Department of Finance. The first involves “electronically delivered amusements” while the second relates to “nonpossessory computer leases.” Both rulings extend existing tax legislation to tack an extra nine percent tax onto certain types of online services.

Streaming media certainly seems to fall under the amusement umbrella, while the second ruling could conceivably cover anything from AWS to Lexis Nexus. According to law firm Reed Smith, the new laws cover streaming media services along with SaaS and PaaS, which amounts to an extremely broad range of vendors and solutions. Consumers using these services in Chicago will now be responsible for paying the tax, and companies like Netflix are already taking steps to incorporate it in their billing processes.

"Jurisdictions around the world, including the U.S., are trying to figure out ways to tax online services," said a Netflix representative. "This is one approach."


Michael Wynne, a partner at Reed Smith, claims the second ruling violates the 1998 Internet Tax Freedom Act, which is meant to prevent discrimination against services delivered via the Internet. And the firm believes both rulings violate the Federal Telecommunications Act as well.

"There's no question that the city needs revenue and I can see where things are escaping the old tax base," said Wynne, "I think the objectionable part is that, instead of drafting new laws for that, we're simply stretching the old laws to fit."

Cities like Chicago are struggling to recoup lost local taxes once derived from video rental and music stores. Consequently, it is very likely other municipalities will institute similar cloud taxes, to the chagrin of consumers and online service providers alike.

The new laws also raise questions about exactly how the tax will be instituted and how companies can possibly comply as mobile subscribers move in and out of the taxable jurisdiction. While the tax officially went into effect today, companies have until September 1 to implement it.




Edited by Maurice Nagle
Get stories like this delivered straight to your inbox. [Free eNews Subscription]

TechZone360 Contributing Editor

SHARE THIS ARTICLE
Related Articles

ChatGPT Isn't Really AI: Here's Why

By: Contributing Writer    4/17/2024

ChatGPT is the biggest talking point in the world of AI, but is it actually artificial intelligence? Click here to find out the truth behind ChatGPT.

Read More

Revolutionizing Home Energy Management: The Partnership of Hub Controls and Four Square/TRE

By: Reece Loftus    4/16/2024

Through a recently announced partnership with manufacturer Four Square/TRE, Hub Controls is set to redefine the landscape of home energy management in…

Read More

4 Benefits of Time Tracking Software for Small Businesses

By: Contributing Writer    4/16/2024

Time tracking is invaluable for every business's success. It ensures teams and time are well managed. While you can do manual time tracking, it's time…

Read More

How the Terraform Registry Helps DevOps Teams Increase Efficiency

By: Contributing Writer    4/16/2024

A key component to HashiCorp's Terraform infrastructure-as-code (IaC) ecosystem, the Terraform Registry made it to the news in late 2023 when changes …

Read More

Nightmares, No More: New CanineAlert Device for Service Dogs Helps Reduce PTSD for Owners, Particularly Veterans

By: Alex Passett    4/11/2024

Canine Companions, a nonprofit organization that transforms the lives of veterans (and others) suffering PTSD with vigilant service dogs, has debuted …

Read More