Ecuador Tax Agency Closes Microsoft Branch Offices 109
An anonymous reader writes "The Ecuador Tax Agency (SRI) has closed Microsoft branch offices for seven days. 'We have twice requested balances, payment reports and complete tax information, but the company hasn't given it to us, so in accordance with our laws we have proceeded with the closure,' the SRI official in charge of the proceeding said. Microsoft said it was a human mistake."
Ha! (Score:5, Funny)
In Soviet Russia... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:In Soviet Russia... (Score:5, Funny)
As opposed to Soviet Korporate Amerika, where Microsoft taxes YOU!
In such a context,
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I'm all for both, especially after the still-ongoing flamewar with another Slashdotter.
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Replying to myself since I cannot simply append to the previous post...
Flag burning, you say... well, what a coincidence, then, that the Windows logo is a cross between a flag and a window...
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Well, seeing as the latest openSUSE will run Windows (Win9x or XP Pro) as a guest operating system, either inside a window, or running the individual apps right on the desktop, no wine needed, and its a LOT nicer than Vista ... we have a Winner! Or should I say a Window of Opportunity?
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Ah, Mr. AC... don't I know you from somewhere?
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First Time (Score:4, Insightful)
I wonder if this is related to paying for votes on the ISO committee?
Re:First Time (Score:4, Funny)
Maybe the first person who made the mistake was fired, and the replacement also happened to make the same mistake.
That's not giving Microsoft the benefit of doubt, I'm thinking of how many times they make the same mistakes over and over, almost like it's company policy.
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If that's the case, would it still be human error to follow company policy?
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Twice over: one human error making the bad policy, another acting on it. Problem is HR never sees it that way.
HAL 9001 now works for the Microsoft PR department (Score:1)
"Well, I don't think there is any question about it. It can only be attributable to human error. This sort of thing has cropped up before and it has always been due to human error."
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Excel (Score:4, Funny)
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Human error (Score:2, Funny)
Matrix (Score:3, Funny)
Ecuador: Dodge this.
"closing" a business in an online world (Score:5, Insightful)
At what point in time will tax authorities seek the right to seize a company's domain name and DNS entries to truly seize a business for back taxes.
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This means that for at least seven days, any Ecuadoran corporation that needs Microsoft support is SOL [Sh*t Outta Luck]. That might cause some ripples in the mining industry, for instance.
I don't see how this benefits the worldwide adoption of Vista or Office 2007. This is an entirely new avenue by which a corporate user of Microsoft products might find their operations temporarily "locally orphaned"— that is, without any local vendor support. I'm pretty sure that this event has not been received f
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A friend of mine (Mexican) who works for Microsoft was offered a position getting the Columbia center off the ground. He turned them down on the grounds that Columbia isn;t a very safe place to be.
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can't they just call up microsoft in the US directly?
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For some things. Not for, say, face to face help in preparing a proposal to the bosses for converting the Advertising Department to Vista... which is the kind of support that Microsoft really likes to provide.
Doubtless there are other kinds of assistance that MS provides locally that are not available through Redmond. Especially wrt social networking and other kinds of "soft" support.
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A human mistake (Score:5, Funny)
Well, it's highly unlikely they'd admit it was a technology mistake. So, a head will roll, a chair will be thrown, and full faith in Microsoft technology will return to normal in Ecuador.
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Yeah right... like there are any humans working at Microsoft.
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tax evasion (Score:5, Funny)
\ taxes. May I help you? /
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\ ____
\ / __ \
\ O| |O|
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|___/
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May your chrome shine until the coming of the MacGuyver at the Time of Unbending.
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That little guy is my hero.
Celebrity Section for Slashdot? (Score:5, Insightful)
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> "Bill Gates gets a fashion makeover - image slideshow"
They already tried that in the '80s. Didn't work then ... won't work now.
He was posing for a cover shot for newsweek. He held up something, and you could see the hole in his sweaters' armpit. So they had him take off the sweater. Then you got to see the pit stains on his shirt. They had to literally take the shirt off another Microsoft employee's back to get a "clean shot."
"Stinkin' nerdz!"
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Celebrity gossup / papparazzi is one of my biggest pet-peeves. It drives me INSANE when people care about Paris Hilton being in jail or Britney shaving her head or whatever. The fact that I even know those events occurred makes me want to kill myself. I mean, really WHO THE HELL CARES AND WHY ?!?! Are people's own lives so bloody shallow that they need to constantly invade the privacy of other people that they do not eve
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Paris Hilton being in jail was hard to miss even for me. But I managed to not know about Britney. Until you told me, that is... So now I have to go kill myself too. Thank you very much.
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For that matter, is Paris Hilton related to the hotels?
Inquiring minds don't care enough to look it up on Google.
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Chris [youtube.com]?? Is that you??
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So you are that guy/girl in the Leave Britney Alone video. That explains it.
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Yes.
Especially, of course, if your life consists of doing whatever your day job (or school, etc.) happens to be, and then spending the rest of your time watching tv or reading fashion/gossip/etc. magazines.
Then there's people who invent causes. Religion. Making a better X. Microsoft must die. Etc. I say "invent", because, usually, if
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> working on, the direction that Jobs is taking his business, whether Steve Ballmer
> will be finally taken to an asylum to get the anger management that he needs.
With the exception of the Ballmer comment, there's nothing wrong with being interested in those things.
Think of it this way, is it wrong to listen to what Bush says? Or your representative? Of course not, because the decisions these people make affect your l
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However, if you run an apple, the decisions Jobs makes will matter to you
Oh man for like a whole minute I was thinking... is Jobs some fruit guru who knows everything about apples?? And what does it mean to "run an apple" would it be like running *with* an apple, hiking and taking one with you so it can be a convenient snack later in the day? And then I realized, "...ohhhh Apple COMPUTER!"
;_;
The worst part is, it's not like I read that phrase in isolation. I read the previous sentence, too. And a lot of sentences before it as well. And, you know, Slashdot in general.
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Actually, it seems to be an biological evolutionary trait. We are constantly interested in what do other members of our species around us do, whether we like it or not. The reasons is that there's better chance of survival if mistakes are learned from others. The "media" are just catering to this instinct - if people want to do something, someone will figure out how to make money from it sooner or later. Incidentally, this same instinct is why we like reading stories (and watching movies), whether fiction o
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Look, this article, a little vaporous, but overall the stuff you're looking into is not vaporous. If you work in the IT industry, then this stuff is actually your job. Linus and Jobs and Balmer are leaders of large amounts of IT resources. Their decisions influence millions of dollars, move hundreds of bodies and affect the way that you do business.
Paris Hilton == vapour, she's really not important, she's really just an unimportant peon of the tabloids. Linus/Jobs/Balmer, these are guys influencing the f
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No special treatment. (Score:4, Insightful)
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Ecuador just got a new Anti-American President.
In Ecuador there are so many small businesses (There is a store on every street corner) that they can only enforce taxes on the large companies.
In Ecuador you can buy Pirated Movies and CD's just about anywhere. No taxes on them either.
Feel good yet? (Score:2, Funny)
The entire story by my beloved Slashdot editor, Cowboyneal, should be modded as flamebait.
My god. How freaking petty to post such dribble on the front page of Slashdot as we celebrate the 10 year anniversary.
Yeah. MS is purposefully trying to rip off freaking Ecuador. What is the implication? Rwanda is next on their "hit list?"
How embarrassing, Cowboyneal. I shall withhold my Cowboyneal vote on the next two polls in retaliation. Next time, RTFA and then look for more sources on Google News.
There are hundred
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True, but those 'parking tickets' tend to be addressed before they're given out a second time and the office gets closed.
Actually this is very significant (Score:5, Informative)
If Microsoft is not cooperating with tax audits, this could be due to an issue of management in their branch officies, but it could also be due to a human error. What is significant is that this happened at all. 10 years ago, it would have been unthinkable even if they weren't paying taxes at all. 20 years ago, it would have been avoided for fear of covert retribution from the US (as we saw in Guatamala, and arguably Ecuador as well).
This is significant because it means that Correa is serious about his willingness to stand up to powerful foreign corporations. Its significance is not limited to Microsoft-- this is more significant as to how it affects things like oil exports, foreign-owned banana plantations, and the like.
The rule of law is being asserted strongly in Ecuador which is a good thing.
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Ecuadoran corporations that expect local support of the software they license from Microsoft may feel that this is a rather big thing. This isn't a "parking ticket" where Microsoft has to pay a fine. This is a "nobody is allowed to get in the building" show stopper.
CIOs of corporations in other countries now need to consider a new kind of risk as they decide whether to stay with the same vendor or explore other options. Part of choosing a software vendor has always involved assessing whether that vendor w
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and surely if they are really desperate they can just ring microsoft support in the USA.
If they need more licenses desperately then worst case they can just buy them retail.
in sumary why is a short term (or even permanent) shutdown of a local branch office significant?
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Because they do more stuff on a larger scale than home users and small businesses.
and surely if they are really desperate they can just ring microsoft support in the USA.
Who will be absolutely unfamiliar with any localization that is required in Ecuador.
MSFT PROXY VOTE IS NOW (Score:2, Insightful)
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Uh, no.
Based on Friday's stock price and listed market cap [yahoo.com], Microsoft has approximately 9.375 billion shares outstanding. Slashdot UIDs are at about 1.2 million; be generous and assume that every UID is a unique user, and that there are another million ACs (personally, I think that's very generous). 2.
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You think they didn't anticipate that kind of a coup?
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Umm, yeah Ecuador is high on the list... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Umm, yeah Ecuador is high on the list... (Score:4, Insightful)
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Well, yes, but you're talking about Microsoft here. They're trying to BE the law, I guess that's the only way to overcome the tiny problem of being a multiple times convicted monopoly.. I'm waiting for a sign that MyEthics has made it out of alpha there, but there seem to be serious interoperability issues with the rest of Microsoft..
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I don't know what's more troubling: rampant corporate arrogance and criminal activity, or those who would be apologists for their corporate overlords (whom I, for one, do not welcome).
Ecua... who? (Score:2)
Hmmm, let's see, now where in the map [chrisharrison.net] is Ecuador?
No, I don't think it will rank very high on the list. However, this doesn't mean they are free to break the law. If you don't like the law, then do not open a branch in that country, it's as simple as that. Being a small country makes it a small loss not having a branch there.
Ecuador moving to free software (Score:5, Interesting)
http://rudd-o.com/archives/2006/12/13/%C2%A1success-for-free-software-in-latin-america/ [rudd-o.com]
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Yes, but it's annoying for MS regardless - such corrupt Governments and STILL no way to buy themselves in. That's quite an example for the OOXML ISO process, no?
Correa is no Chavez (Score:4, Informative)
My own feeling is that Correa has acted responsibly regarding the attempts to rewrite the Constitution by tackling it immediately so that the question of term limits is less likely to be addressed as a way of keeping him in power.
CUrrently everything Correa has accomplished has been through sheer power of personality. He has been able to get previously opposing parties to back him and has, time and time again, routed opposition by building political alliances which would have seemed impossible before.
Correa, unlike Chavez is not a part of a massive political party. In fact, he doesn't have anyone from his party in Congress. Correa wants Ecuador, not Venezuela or Brazil, to be the new center of South America. Appearances aside, I think he is actually Chavez's worst enemy.
Correa earned his Masters in Economics in Belguim, and his PHD at the University of Illinois. He is a former university professor at USFQ (Universidad de San Francisco de Quito). He is hardly Anti-American. though he does dispise the Bush Administration (but so do I....). He is, however, unlikely to be a puppet to any other government.
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Also (Score:5, Funny)
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For a minute there... (Score:2)
Oh, well, I guess I'll have to continue the work for my Ig Nobel nomination to make it to the
I doubt the "human error" explanation.. (Score:1)
Human mistake? (Score:2)
Msft ran a tax scam in the USA also (Score:2)
SRI can be a pain in the arse (Score:2)
I have also seen small businesses like restaurants closed for days for not paying IVA (VAT tax).
I once saw graffiti that said something like "stop the corruption of the SRI" -- *on* the SRI office in the jungle city of Puyo.
OUTRAGE (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:OUTRAGE and Conspiracy (Score:1)
I believe that you've uncovered a cover-up!
Well done!
Now let us see Uncle Steve get out of this one!!!!
Quote from Wikipedia "Darwin is composed of code developed by Apple along with code derived from NEXTSTEP"
NEXTSTEP? Is this the Next Step Uncle Steve?
There's more to this that meets intelligent design...
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Not really-- this is significant (Score:5, Interesting)
This is a very interesting though as it relates to regional politics. Rafael Correa won his election partly on the promise to clean up corruption in foreign corporate entities (in particular tax evasion and the like). It also has other ramifications for open source, business, economics, etc. in Ecuador. I will be watching this closely.
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Re:Public Prophet and Private Profit (Score:5, Insightful)