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Google Acquires Visual Search Engine, Plink Wednesday, April 14 @ 12:31:46 MST by david (0 reads) | Jeremy Kirk, IDG News Service Jeremy Kirk, Idg News Service – Tue Apr 13, 4:03 am ET
Google has acquired a two-person U.K. startup called Plink that scored a hit with a mobile phone application that identifies artworks and enables users to buy a print.
Plink, based in Oxford, England, was founded by Mark Cummins and James Philbin, who will now both work for Google. The technology comes from their doctorate degree research in the mobile robotics and visual geometry groups at the University of Oxford's department of engineering science.
Their mobile application, called PlinkArt, hit 50,000 users within four weeks. It gives users information about an artwork, let users share it with friends and allow people to order a print.
The application, which only works on the Android operating system, will still be available but not updated. Cummins and Philbin will now work on Google Goggles, a project that lets users search Google by submitting photographs from mobile phones.
"Google has already shown that it's serious about investing in this space with Google Goggles, and for the Plink team the opportunity to take our algorithms to Google-scale was just too exciting to pass up," according to Plink's blog.
The acquisition price was not disclosed.
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Dirty Dozen” Tax Scams for 2006 Tuesday, February 21 @ 13:37:16 MST by david (4568 reads) |  IRS Announces “Dirty Dozen” Tax Scams for 2006
IR-2006-25, Feb. 7, 2006
WASHINGTON — The Internal Revenue Service
today issued the 2006 “Dirty Dozen”––its latest annual tally of some of the most
notorious tax scams––along with an alert to taxpayers this filing season to
watch out for schemes that promise to reduce or eliminate taxes.
Two new
schemes have worked their way onto the list in 2006. In recent months IRS
personnel have noted the emergence of the two scams––“zero wages” and “Form 843
tax abatement”–– in which filers use IRS forms to claim that their tax bills
have been wrongly inflated.
Also high on the list in 2006 is “phishing,”
a favorite ploy of identity thieves. Over the past few years, the IRS has
observed criminals working through the Internet, posing even as representatives
of the IRS itself, with the goal of tricking unsuspecting taxpayers into
revealing private information that can be used to steal from their financial
accounts.
Several of the usual suspects from last year remain on the
list. The IRS, for example, continues to see schemes designed to exploit
charitable organizations. Some taxpayers, meanwhile, still use frivolous
arguments to claim they do not owe taxes, despite the fact such reasoning has
been thrown out of court time and again.
“When it comes to taxes,
everyone has to pay their fair share,” IRS Commissioner Mark W. Everson said. “I
urge taxpayers not to be taken in by hucksters who promise to lower or eliminate
taxes. Getting caught up in the Dirty Dozen or similar schemes can lead to big
headaches.”
Namely, involvement with tax schemes can lead to imprisonment
and fines. The IRS pursues and shuts down promoters of these and numerous other
scams. Anyone pulled into these schemes can also face repayment of taxes plus
interest and penalties.
The IRS urges people to avoid these common
schemes:
1. Zero Wages. In this scam, new to the Dirty
Dozen, a taxpayer attaches to his or her return either a Form 4852 (Substitute
Form W-2) or a “corrected” Form 1099 that shows zero or little wages or other
income. The taxpayer may include a statement indicating the taxpayer is
rebutting information submitted to the IRS by the payer. An explanation on
the Form 4852 may cite "statutory language behind IRC 3401 and 3121" or may
include some reference to the paying company refusing to issue a corrected Form
W-2 for fear of IRS retaliation. The Form 4852 or 1099 is usually attached to a
“Zero Return.” (See number four below.)
2. Form 843 Tax
Abatement. This scam, also new to the Dirty Dozen, rests on faulty
interpretation of the Internal Revenue Code. It involves the filer requesting
abatement of previously assessed tax using Form 843. Many using this scam have
not previously filed tax returns and the tax they are trying to have abated has
been assessed by the IRS through the Substitute for Return Program. The filer
uses the Form 843 to list reasons for the request. Often, one of the reasons is:
"Failed to properly compute and/or calculate IRC Sec 83––Property Transferred in
Connection with Performance of Service."
3. Phishing.
Phishing is a technique used by identity thieves to acquire personal financial
data in order to gain access to the financial accounts of unsuspecting
consumers, run up charges on their credit cards or apply for new loans in their
names. These Internet-based criminals pose as representatives of a financial
institution and send out fictitious e-mail correspondence in an attempt to trick
consumers into disclosing private information. Sometimes scammers pose as the
IRS itself. In recent months, some taxpayers have received e-mails that appear
to come from the IRS. A typical e-mail notifies a taxpayer of an outstanding
refund and urges the taxpayer to click on a hyperlink and visit an
official-looking Web site. The Web site then solicits a social security and
credit card number. In a variation of this scheme, criminals have used e-mail to
announce to unsuspecting taxpayers they are “under audit” and could make things
right by divulging selected private financial information. Taxpayers should take
note: The IRS does not use e-mail to initiate contact with taxpayers about
issues related to their accounts. If a taxpayer has any doubt whether a contact
from the IRS is authentic, the taxpayer should call 1-800-829-1040 to confirm
it.
4. Zero Return. Promoters instruct taxpayers to
enter all zeros on their federal income tax filings. In a twist on this scheme,
filers enter zero income, report their withholding and then write “nunc pro
tunc”–– Latin for “now for then”––on the return. They often also do this with
amended returns in the hope the IRS will disregard the original return in which
they reported wages and other income.
5. Trust Misuse.
For years unscrupulous promoters have urged taxpayers to transfer assets into
trusts. They promise reduction of income subject to tax, deductions for personal
expenses and reduced estate or gift taxes. However, some trusts do not deliver
the promised tax benefits, and the IRS is actively examining these arrangements.
There are currently more than 200 active investigations underway and three dozen
injunctions have been obtained against promoters since 2001. As with other
arrangements, taxpayers should seek the advice of a trusted professional before
entering into a trust.
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