By Jacqui Cheng | Last updated about 15 hours ago
Amazon has pulled the plug on its affiliate program in Colorado thanks to a new state regulation on sales tax collection. The company sent a notice to its Colorado-based affiliates Monday morning to let them know about the decision, urging residents who depend on the affiliate program to contact their lawmakers if they want the program back.
Most states only require retailers to collect sales tax if they have a sufficient enough brick-and-mortar presence thanks to a 1992 Supreme Court decision on Quill Corp. v. North Dakota. Despite this, a handful of states have tried to pass laws in recent years (often dubbed the "Amazon Tax") that would force Amazon to start collecting sales tax if their affiliates—that is, those who use Amazon's affiliate links on their own sites or blogs in order to earn a return on referrals—are based in those states.
The Colorado law in question is HB 10-1193, which targets sales made by affiliates through out-of-state retailers such as Amazon. Because the affiliate lives in Colorado and is "targeting" other Colorado residents (in sort of a roundabout way via the Internet, since the Internet really targets everyone in the world), state legislators feel that Amazon should collect and pay Colorado sales taxes.
According to Amazon's e-mail to affiliates posted by Global Geek News, "
he new regulations do not require online retailers to collect sales tax. Instead, they are clearly intended to increase the compliance burden to a point where online retailers will be induced to 'voluntarily' collect Colorado sales tax—a course we won't take."
more:
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2010/03/amazon-kills-affiliate-program-in-colorado-thanks-to-taxes.ars