Sorry, my ISP's certificate will be detected as not for my domain ( which is correct ! ) and so I don't have https on my file store, only http. It's likely your phone's browser is not accepting http by default and you have to go to page settings or somesuch to disable that. I really should get my own certificate .....
On my phone I just press on the area where the picture would be and select 'view image', try something like that.
Cheers, Mike.
( edit ) I've just ordered a certificate but there's a bit of a rigamarole to have it created & installed, this should be done in about the next 24 hours.
I have made this letter longer than usual because I lack the time to make it shorter ...
... and my other CPU is a Ryzen 5950X :-) Blaise Pascal
Certificate in and & working, yeah ! The illustrations are https and that is now supported by my file store. If you can't see a phone case mockup with an E@H logo between here
and here, then please let me know.
Cheers, Mike.
I have made this letter longer than usual because I lack the time to make it shorter ...
... and my other CPU is a Ryzen 5950X :-) Blaise Pascal
A Proud member of the O.F.A. (Old Farts Association). Be well, do good work, and keep in touch.® (Garrison Keillor) I want some more patience. RIGHT NOW!
Update on 'I'm gonna have to really drill down on tax aspects': After rather more research I have discovered that sales tax/GST/VAT is somewhat more complex than I first thought. My first impression was wrong, alas, in that I assumed it was my physical location that primarily determined the tax rate ( GST of 10% in AUD ). That is not true*.
The drop-shipper will pay the tax for their end of the deal ( based on their 'wholesale' price ) depending on where they fulfil the order as a physical presence and/or a given customer's location that they ship to. That amount is thus charged as a component of the price to the vendor ( me ). The drop-shipper then reconciles that with whomsoever collects such sales tax. So I need not worry about that. Now there may be further taxes to pay depending on any 'retail' markup though, with the onus being upon the vendor to correctly collect, report and remit this to potentially very many taxing entities.
The bad news is that the likely biggest market ( USA ) is an absolute minefield with variations across most states, and in some states it even depends on which county you are in ( it makes GST/VAT look real easy ). Indeed a neighbour over your back fence in an adjacent street may even pay a different rate for the same item ! It is almost always activity based ( the concept of economic nexus holds here ) ie. total sales to a given tax jurisdiction and/or number of sales. My impression is that many fairly local entities have sales tax as a big ticket item in their fundraising. It is the case that many online sellers don't disclose, charge, with-hold or reconcile this component at all ! I guess they're hoping no-one notices them or pursues them. They probably have simply given up on tracking this tax liability, more so because it is too complex rather than holding any intent to avoid tax ( after all that would be charged to the consumer at point of sale ). Anyway this is one reason why online stores are cheaper than physical ones - it is harder to tax and/or audit them across boundaries. Or maybe they figure that if the likes of Amazon can avoid paying taxes, then so can they.
However the good news is that this compliance burden is readily offset by software, relatively cheap, that can calculate and reconcile this for you while also integrating with the e-commerce site you are selling from ....
.... at least until the next SCOTUS or other ruling and so you need software that is updated to track changes for you, worldwide. There are several products that do this for my situation eg. Taxify ( for ~ $50 AUD ).
So the take home message is that it's not a deal breaker. Which is a relief ! ;-)
Cheers, Mike.
* Except if the customer is in Australia.
( edit ) So one other upside is that there may be no sales tax at all, at least until the vendor hits a per fiscal annum activity threshold eg. 200 items or $50K USD for a given tax jurisdiction.
I have made this letter longer than usual because I lack the time to make it shorter ...
... and my other CPU is a Ryzen 5950X :-) Blaise Pascal
The bad news is that the likely biggest market ( USA ) is an absolute minefield with variations across most states, and in some states it even depends on which county you are in ( it makes GST/VAT look real easy ). Indeed a neighbour over your back fence in an adjacent street may even pay a different rate for the same item !
No kidding. I live in an unincorporated (i.e. not part of the city of Albuquerque) portion of Bernalillo County, in New Mexico USA. My sales tax rate differs from that of my nearby neighbors who live in the same county, but inside the city boundary.
Update on 'I'm gonna have to really drill down on tax aspects': After rather more research I have discovered that sales tax/GST/VAT is somewhat more complex than I first thought. My first impression was wrong, alas, in that I assumed it was my physical location that primarily determined the tax rate ( GST of 10% in AUD ). That is not true*.
.....[SNIP.....
However the good news is that this compliance burden is readily offset by software, relatively cheap, that can calculate and reconcile this for you while also integrating with the e-commerce site you are selling from ....
.... at least until the next SCOTUS or other ruling and so you need software that is updated to track changes for you, worldwide. There are several products that do this for my situation eg. Taxify ( for ~ $50 AUD ).
.....[SNIP.....
( edit ) So one other upside is that there may be no sales tax at all, at least until the vendor hits a per fiscal annum activity threshold eg. 200 items or $50K USD for a given tax jurisdiction.
If you need or want a donation to offset your costs, I'll be happy to oblige! Or just add a small $$ amount to whatever the costs are to you to send the t-shirts to us BOINC Einstein crunchers. I'm sure that they (we?) won't mind. :*)
Last I knew there are exceptions that you can drive a truckload through for those rate rules in the USA. However usually just one truckload per year. The tax collectors don't really want to set up an account for a merchant who is only going to sell $100 worth of stuff in their area. Costs them more than they will collect.
Now if you say fulfill with Amazon, their software automatically does the calculations and charges correctly. (They send more and one truckload to everywhere)
Just don't forget customs duties when stuff crosses international borders.
Sorry, my ISP's certificate
)
Sorry, my ISP's certificate will be detected as not for my domain ( which is correct ! ) and so I don't have https on my file store, only http. It's likely your phone's browser is not accepting http by default and you have to go to page settings or somesuch to disable that. I really should get my own certificate .....
On my phone I just press on the area where the picture would be and select 'view image', try something like that.
Cheers, Mike.
( edit ) I've just ordered a certificate but there's a bit of a rigamarole to have it created & installed, this should be done in about the next 24 hours.
I have made this letter longer than usual because I lack the time to make it shorter ...
... and my other CPU is a Ryzen 5950X :-) Blaise Pascal
Certificate in and & working,
)
Certificate in and & working, yeah ! The illustrations are https and that is now supported by my file store. If you can't see a phone case mockup with an E@H logo between here
and here, then please let me know.
Cheers, Mike.
I have made this letter longer than usual because I lack the time to make it shorter ...
... and my other CPU is a Ryzen 5950X :-) Blaise Pascal
I can see them. Thank you.
)
I can see them. Thank you.
A Proud member of the O.F.A. (Old Farts Association). Be well, do good work, and keep in touch.® (Garrison Keillor) I want some more patience. RIGHT NOW!
Cool thing, Mike! Thanks
)
Cool thing, Mike! Thanks
E pluribus unum
Update on 'I'm gonna have to
)
Update on 'I'm gonna have to really drill down on tax aspects': After rather more research I have discovered that sales tax/GST/VAT is somewhat more complex than I first thought. My first impression was wrong, alas, in that I assumed it was my physical location that primarily determined the tax rate ( GST of 10% in AUD ). That is not true*.
The drop-shipper will pay the tax for their end of the deal ( based on their 'wholesale' price ) depending on where they fulfil the order as a physical presence and/or a given customer's location that they ship to. That amount is thus charged as a component of the price to the vendor ( me ). The drop-shipper then reconciles that with whomsoever collects such sales tax. So I need not worry about that. Now there may be further taxes to pay depending on any 'retail' markup though, with the onus being upon the vendor to correctly collect, report and remit this to potentially very many taxing entities.
The bad news is that the likely biggest market ( USA ) is an absolute minefield with variations across most states, and in some states it even depends on which county you are in ( it makes GST/VAT look real easy ). Indeed a neighbour over your back fence in an adjacent street may even pay a different rate for the same item ! It is almost always activity based ( the concept of economic nexus holds here ) ie. total sales to a given tax jurisdiction and/or number of sales. My impression is that many fairly local entities have sales tax as a big ticket item in their fundraising. It is the case that many online sellers don't disclose, charge, with-hold or reconcile this component at all ! I guess they're hoping no-one notices them or pursues them. They probably have simply given up on tracking this tax liability, more so because it is too complex rather than holding any intent to avoid tax ( after all that would be charged to the consumer at point of sale ). Anyway this is one reason why online stores are cheaper than physical ones - it is harder to tax and/or audit them across boundaries. Or maybe they figure that if the likes of Amazon can avoid paying taxes, then so can they.
However the good news is that this compliance burden is readily offset by software, relatively cheap, that can calculate and reconcile this for you while also integrating with the e-commerce site you are selling from ....
.... at least until the next SCOTUS or other ruling and so you need software that is updated to track changes for you, worldwide. There are several products that do this for my situation eg. Taxify ( for ~ $50 AUD ).
So the take home message is that it's not a deal breaker. Which is a relief ! ;-)
Cheers, Mike.
* Except if the customer is in Australia.
( edit ) So one other upside is that there may be no sales tax at all, at least until the vendor hits a per fiscal annum activity threshold eg. 200 items or $50K USD for a given tax jurisdiction.
I have made this letter longer than usual because I lack the time to make it shorter ...
... and my other CPU is a Ryzen 5950X :-) Blaise Pascal
Mike Hewson wrote: The bad
)
No kidding. I live in an unincorporated (i.e. not part of the city of Albuquerque) portion of Bernalillo County, in New Mexico USA. My sales tax rate differs from that of my nearby neighbors who live in the same county, but inside the city boundary.
Mike Hewson wrote:Update on
)
If you need or want a donation to offset your costs, I'll be happy to oblige! Or just add a small $$ amount to whatever the costs are to you to send the t-shirts to us BOINC Einstein crunchers. I'm sure that they (we?) won't mind. :*)
Proud member of the Old Farts Association
@Archae86 - yep, it's like
)
@Archae86 - yep, it's like well who can work that out ?
@GWgeorge007 - it's a cost like any other. You fold it into the price.
Cheers, Mike.
I have made this letter longer than usual because I lack the time to make it shorter ...
... and my other CPU is a Ryzen 5950X :-) Blaise Pascal
Last I knew there are
)
Last I knew there are exceptions that you can drive a truckload through for those rate rules in the USA. However usually just one truckload per year. The tax collectors don't really want to set up an account for a merchant who is only going to sell $100 worth of stuff in their area. Costs them more than they will collect.
Now if you say fulfill with Amazon, their software automatically does the calculations and charges correctly. (They send more and one truckload to everywhere)
Just don't forget customs duties when stuff crosses international borders.
Customs, like import duties
)
Customs, like import duties and stuff? Oh crap. Thanks for the heads up. I think the drop-shipper reconciles that but clearly I'll need to check.
Cheers, Mike.
I have made this letter longer than usual because I lack the time to make it shorter ...
... and my other CPU is a Ryzen 5950X :-) Blaise Pascal