Posted on 12/18/2019 1:12:09 PM PST by grundle
The jobs are just moving. And the internet makes that very easy.
Californias tax authority has been insane, trying to collect income taxes from people in other states paid by California firms. And in some cases, people who sold high dollar items to California.
Now, California Can Assess Taxes No Matter Where You Live...Really
https://www.forbes.com/sites/robertwood/2019/10/22/now-california-can-assess-taxes-no-matter-where-you-livereally/
This has created several ongoing shifts in the freelancing world. (I do this for a living.) Platforms are banning California residents from taking new assignments, because they dont want the person classified as an employee. Requestors of projects are refusing to work with people in California. Ive been asked to not only confirm I live in Texas but prove it.
Another possible out for these requestors is to move to another freelancing platform not based in California. Upwork loses work, iwriter gains it.
Another issue is that platforms can easily migrate servers and locations. Imagine the company based in Silicon Valley saying were now in Texas or Florida. Congratulations, that states laws apply. They can continue issuing projects from requestors to freelancers, and California loses a taxpayer who can move more easily than anything else.
The last ditch move for some of these firms is entirely relying on international talent. If the freelancers are in India and China, you dont have to worry about U.S. employment rules.
A number of publications were saying we’ll take submissions - for free. Not paying you. You’ll also see a lot more sponsored content and unofficial sponsored content (lawyer is interviewed/answers questions in exchange for a plug for the firm).
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