Internet
Tax Freedom Act
(as one title incorporated
into the omnibus
spending bill passed by the 105th Congress)
MORATORIUM ON CERTAIN TAXES
SEC.____ 00. SHORT TITLE.
This title may be cited as
the "Internet Tax Freedom Act".
SEC.____ 01. MORATORIUM.
(a) MORATORIUM.--No State or
political subdivision thereof shall impose any of the following
taxes during the period beginning on October 1, 1998, and ending
3 years after the date of the enactment of this Act--
(1) taxes on Internet
access, unless such tax was generally imposed and actually
enforced prior to October 1, 1998; and
(2) multiple or
discriminatory taxes on electronic commerce.
(b) PRESERVATION OF STATE
AND LOCAL TAXING AUTHORITY.--Except as provided in this section,
nothing in this title shall be construed to modify, impair, or
supersede, or authorize the modification, impairment, or
superseding of, any State or local law pertaining to taxation
that is otherwise permissible by or under the Constitution of the
United States or other Federal law and in effect on the date of
enactment of this Act.
(c) LIABILITIES AND PENDING
CASES.--Nothing in this title affects liability for taxes accrued
and enforced before the date of enactment of this Act, nor does
this title affect ongoing litigation relating to such taxes.
(d) DEFINITION OF GENERALLY
IMPOSED AND ACTUALLY ENFORCED.--For purposes of this section, a
tax has been generally imposed and actually enforced prior to
October 1, 1998, if, before that date, the tax was authorized by
Statute and either--
(1) a provider of Internet
access services had a reasonable opportunity to know by virtue of
a rule or other public proclamation made by the appropriate
administrative agency of the State or political subdivision
thereof, that such agency has interpreted and applied such tax to
Internet access services; or
(2) a State or political
subdivision thereof generally collected such tax on charges for
Internet access.
(e) EXCEPTION TO
MORATORIUM.--
(1) IN GENERAL.--Subsection
(a) shall also not apply in the case of any person or entity who
knowingly and with knowledge of the character of the material, in
interstate or foreign commerce by means of the World Wide Web,
makes any communication for commercial purposes that is available
to any minor and that includes any material that is harmful to
minors unless such person or entity has restricted access by
minors to material that is harmful to minors--
- by requiring use of a
credit card, debit amount, adult access code, or adult
personal identification number;
- by accepting a digital
certificate that verifies age; or
- by any other reasonable
measures that are feasible under available technology.
(2) SCOPE OF EXCEPTION.--For
purposes of paragraph (1), a person shall not be considered to
making a communication for commercial purposes of material to the
extent that the person is--
- a telecommunications
carrier engaged in the provision of a telecommunications
service;
- a person engaged in the
business of providing an Internet access service;
- a person engaged in the
business of providing an Internet information location
tool; or
- similarly engaged in
the transmission, storage, retrieval, hosting,
formatting, or translation (or any combination thereof)
of a communication made by another person, without
selection or alteration of the communication.
(3) DEFINITIONS.--In this
subsection:
(A) BY MEANS OF THE WORLD
WIDE WEB.--The term "by means of the World Wide Web"
means by placement of material in a computer server-based file
archive so that it is publicly accessible, over the Internet,
using hypertext transfer protocol, file transfer protocol, or
other similar protocols.
(B) COMMERCIAL PURPOSES;
ENGAGED IN THE BUSINESS.--
- COMMERCIAL PURPOSES.--A
person shall be considered to make a communication for
commercial purposes only if such person is engaged in the
business of making such communications.
- ENGAGED IN THE
BUSINESS.--The term "engaged in the business"
means that the person who makes a communication, or
offers to make a communication, by means of the World
Wide Web, that includes any material that is harmful to
minors, devotes time, attention, or labor to such
activities, as a regular course of such person's trade or
business, with the objective of earning a profit as a
result of such activities (although it is not necessary
that the person make a profit or that the making or
offering to make such communications be the person's sole
or principal business or source of income). A person may
be considered to be engaged in the business of making, by
means of the World Wide Web, communications for
commercial purposes that include material that is harmful
to minors, only if the person knowingly causes the
material that is harmful to minors to be posted on the
World Wide Web or knowingly solicits such material to be
posted on the World Wide Web.
(C) INTERNET.--The term
"Internet" means collectively the myriad of computer
and telecommunications facilities, including equipment and
operating software, which comprise the interconnected world-wide
network of networks that employ the Transmission Control
Protocol/Internet Protocol, or any predecessor or successor
protocols to such protocol, to communicate information of all
kinds by wire or radio.
(D) INTERNET ACCESS
SERVICE.--The term "Internet access service" means a
service that enables users to access content, information,
electronic mail, or other services offered over the Internet and
may also include access to proprietary content, information, and
other services as part of a package of services offered to
consumers. Such term does not include telecommunications
services.
(E) INTERNET INFORMATION
LOCATION TOOL.--The term "Internet information location
tool" means a service that refers or links users to an
online location on the World Wide Web. Such term includes
directories, indices, references, pointers, and hypertext links.
(F) MATERIAL THAT iS HARMFUL
TO MINORS.--The term "material that is harmful to
minors" means any communication, picture, image, graphic
image file, article, recording, writing, or other matter of any
kind that is obscene or that--
- the average person,
applying contemporary community standards, would find,
taking the material as a whole and with respect to
minors, is designed to appeal to, or is designed to
pander to, the prurient interest;
- depicts, describes, or
represents, in a manner patently offensive with respect
to minors, an actual or simulated sexual act or sexual
contact, an actual or simulated normal or perverted
sexual act, or a lewd exhibition of the genitals or
post-pubescent female breast; and
- taken as a whole, lacks
serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific
value for minors.
(G) MINOR.--The term
"minor" means any person under 17 years of age.
(H) TELECOMMUNICATIONS
CARRIER; TELECOMMUNICATIONS SERVICE.--The
"telecommunications carrier" and
"telecommunications service" have the meanings given
such terms in section 3 of the Communications Act of 1934 (47
U.S.C. 153).
(f) ADDITIONAL EXCEPTION TO
MORATORIUM.--
(1) IN
GENERAL.--Subsection (a) shall also not apply with respect to
an Internet access provider, unless, at the time of entering
into an agreement with a customer for the provision of
Internet access services, such provider offers such customer
(either for a fee or at no charge) screening software that is
designed to permit the customer to limit access to material
on the Internet that is harmful to minors.
(2) DEFINITIONS.--In
this subsection:
(A) INTERNET ACCESS
PROVIDER.--The term 'Internet access provider' means a
person engaged in the business of providing a computer
and communications facility through which a customer may
obtain access to the Internet, but does not include a
common carrier to the extent that it provides only
telecommunications services.
(B) INTERNET ACCESS
SERVICES.--The term 'Internet access services' means the
provision of computer and communications services through
which a customer using a computer and a modem or other
communications device may obtain access to the Internet,
but does not include telecommunications services provided
by a common carrier.
(C) SCREENING
SOFTWARE.--The term "screening software" means
software that is designed to permit a person to limit
access to material on the Internet that is harmful to
minors.
(3)
APPLICABILITY.--Paragraph (1) shall apply to agreements for
the provision of Internet access services entered into on or
after the date that is 6 months after the date of enactment
of this Act.
SEC.____02. ADVISORY
COMMISSION ON ELECTRONIC COMMERCE.
(a) ESTABLISHMENT OF
COMMISSION.--There is established a commission to be known as the
Advisory Commission on Electronic Commerce (in this title
refferred to as the "Commission"). The Commission
shall--
(1) be composed of 19
members appointed in accordance with subsection (b),
including the chairperson who shall be selected by the
members of the Commission from among themselves; and
(2) conduct its business
in accordance with the provisions of this title.
(b) MEMBERSHIP.--
(1) IN GENERAL.--The
Commissioners shall serve for the life of the Commission. The
membership of the Commission shall be as follows:
(A) 3
representatives from the Federal Government, comprised of
the Secretary of Commerce, the Secretary of the Treasury,
and the United States Trade Representative (or their
respective delegates).
(B) 8
representatives from State and local governments (one
such representative shall be from a State or local
government that does not impose a sales tax and one
representative shall be from a State that does not impose
an income tax).
(C) 8
representatives of the electronic commerce industry
(including small business), telecommunications carriers,
local retail businesses, and consumer groups, comprised
of--
(i) 5
individuals appointed by the Majority Leader of the
Senate;
(ii) 3
individuals appointed by the Minority Leader of the
Senate;
(iii) 5
individuals appointed by the Speaker of the House of
Representatives; and
(iv) 3
individuals appointed by the Minority Leader of the
House of Representatives.
(2)
APPOINTMENTS.--Appointments to the Commission shall be made
not later than 45 days after the date of the enactment of
this Act. The chairperson shall be selected not later than 60
days after the date of the enactment of this Act.
(3) VACANCIES.--Any
vacancy in the Commission shall not affect its powers, but
shall be filled in the same manner as the original
appointment.
(c) ACCEPTANCE OF GIFTS AND
GRANTS.--The Commission may accept, use, and dispose of gifts or
grants of services or property, both real and personal, for
purposes of aiding or facilitating the work of the Commission.
Gifts or grants not used at the expiration of the Commission
shall be returned to the donor or grantor.
(d) OTHER RESOURCES.--The
Commission shall have reasonable access to materials, resources,
data, and other information from the Department of Justice, the
Department of Commerce, the Department of State, the Department
of the Treasury, and the Office of the United States Trade
Representative. The Commission shall also have reasonable access
to use the facilities of any such Department or Office for
purposes of conducting meetings.
(e) SUNSET.--The Commission
shall terminate 18 months after the date of the enactment of this
Act.
(f) RULES OF THE
COMMISSION.--
(1) QUORUM.--Nine
members of the Commission shall constitute a quorum
for conducting the
business of the Commission.
(2) MEETINGS.--Any
meetings held by the Commission shall be duly noticed at
least 14 days in advance and shall be open to the public.
(3) OPPORTUNITIES TO
TESTIFY.--The Commission shall provide opportunities for
representatives of the general public, taxpayer groups,
consumer groups, and State and local government officials to
testify.
(4) ADDITIONAL
RULES.--The Commission may adopt other rules as needed.
(g) DUTIES OF THE
COMMISSION.--
(1) IN GENERAL.--The
Commission shall conduct a thorough study of Federal, State
and local, and international taxation and tariff treatment of
transactions using the Internet and Internet access and other
comparable intrastate, interstate or international sales
activities.
(2) ISSUES TO BE
STUDIED.--The Commission may include in the study under
subsection (a)
(A) an examination
of
(i) barriers
imposed in foreign markets on United States providers
of property, goods, services, or information engaged
in electronic commerce and on United States providers
of telecommunications services; and
(ii) how the
imposition of such barriers will affect United States
consumers, the competitiveness of United States
citizens providing property, goods, services, or
information in foreign markets, and the growth and
maturing of the Internet;
(B) an examination
of the collection and administration of consumption taxes
on electronic commerce in other countries and the United
States, and the impact of such collection on the global
economy, including an examination of the relationship
between the collection and administration of such taxes
when the transaction uses the Internet and when it does
not;
(C) an examination
of the impact of the Internet and Internet access
(particularly voice transmission) on the revenue base for
taxes imposed under section 4251 of the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986;
(D) an examination
of model State legislation that--
(i) would
provide uniform definitions of categories of
property, goods, service, or information subject to
or exempt from sales and use taxes; and
(ii) would
ensure that Internet access services, online
services, and communications and transactions using
the Internet, Internet access service, or online
services would be treated in a tax and
technologically neutral manner relative to other
forms of remote sales;
(E) an examination
of the effects of taxation, including the absence of
taxation, on all interstate sales transactions, including
transactions using the Internet, on retail businesses and
on State and local governments, which examination may
include a review of the efforts of State and local
governments to collect sales and use taxes owed on
in-State purchases from out-of-State sellers; and
(F) the examination
of ways to simplify Federal and State and local taxes
imposed on the provision of telecommunications services.
(3) EFFECT ON THE
COMMUNICATIONS ACT OF 1934.--Nothing in this section shall
include an examination of any fees or charges imposed by the
Federal Communications Commission or States related to--
(A) obligations
under the Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. 151 et
seq.); or
(B) the
implementation of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 (or
of amendments made by that Act).
(h) NATIONAL TAX ASSOCIATION
COMMUNICATIONS AND ELECTRONIC COMMERCE TAX PROJECT.--The
Commission shall, to the extent possible, ensure that its work
does not undermine the efforts of the National Tax Association
Communications and Electronic Commerce Tax Project.
SEC.____03. REPORT.
Not later than 18 months
after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Commission shall
transmit to Congress for its consideration a report reflecting
the results, including such legislative recommendations as
required to address the findings of the Commission's study under
this title. Any recommendation agreed to by the Commission shall
be tax and technologically neutral and apply to all forms of
remote commerce. No finding or recommendation shall be included
in the report unless agreed to by at least two-thirds of the
members of the Commission serving at the time the finding or
recommendation is made.
SEC._____04. DEFINITIONS.
For the purposes of this
title:
(1) BIT TAX.--The term
"bit tax" means any tax on electronic commerce
expressly imposed on or measured by the volume of digital
information transmitted electronically, or the volume of digital
information per unit of time transmitted electronically, but does
not include taxes imposed on the provision of telecommunications
services.
(2) DISCRIMINATORY TAX.--The
term "discriminatory tax" means--
(A) any tax imposed by a
State or political subdivision thereof on electronic commerce
that--
(i) is not generally
imposed and legally collectible by such State or such
political subdivision on transactions involving similar
property, goods, services, or information accomplished
through other means;
(ii) is not
generally imposed and legally collectible at the same
rate by such State or such political subdivision on
transactions involving similar property, goods, services,
or information accomplished through other means, unless
the rate is lower as part of a phase-out of the tax over
not more than a 5-year period;
(iii) imposes an
obligation to collect or pay the tax on a different
person or entity than in the case of transactions
involving similar property, goods, services, or
information accomplished through other means;
(iv) establishes a
classification of Internet access service providers or
online service providers for purposes of establishing a
higher tax rate to be imposed on such providers than the
tax rate generally applied to providers of similar
information services delivered through other means; or
(B) any tax imposed by a
State or political subdivision thereof,
(i) except with
respect to a tax (on Internet access) that was generally
imposed and actually enforced prior to October 1, 1998,
the sole ability to access a site on a remote seller's
out-of-State computer server is considered a factor in
determining a remote seller's tax collection obligation;
or
(ii) a provider of
Internet access service or online services is deemed to
be the agent of a remote seller for determining tax
collection obligations solely as a result of--
(I) the display
of a remote seller's information or content on the
out-of-State computer server of a provider of
Internet access service or online services; or
(II) the
processing of orders through the out-of-State
computer server of a provider of Internet access
service or online services.
(3) ELECTRONIC
COMMERCE.--The term "electronic commerce" means any
transaction conducted over the Internet or through Internet
access, comprising the sale, lease, license, offer, or delivery
of property, goods, services, or information, whether or not for
consideration, and includes the provision of Internet access.
(4) INTERNET.--The term
"Internet" means collectively the myriad of computer
and telecommunications facilities, including equipment and
operating software, which comprise the interconnected world-wide
network of networks that employ the Transmission Control
Protocol/Internet Protocol, or any predecessor or successor
protocols to such protocol, to communicate information of all
kinds by wire or radio.
(5) INTERNET ACCESS.--The
term "Internet access" means a service that enables
users to access content, information, electronic mail, or other
services offered over the Internet, and may also include access
to proprietary content, information, and other services as part
of a package of services offered to users. Such term does not
include telecommunications services.
(6) MULTIPLE TAX.--
(A) IN GENERAL.--The
term "multiple tax" means any tax that is imposed
by one State or political subdivision thereof on the same or
essentially the same electronic commerce that is also subject
to another tax imposed by another State or political
subdivision thereof (whether or not at the same rate or on
the same basis), without a credit (for example, a resale
exemption certificate) for taxes paid in other jurisdictions.
(B) EXCEPTION.--Such
term shall not include a sales or use tax imposed by a State
and 1 or more political subdivisions thereof on the same
electronic commerce or a tax on persons engaged in electronic
commerce which also may have been subject to a sales or use
tax thereon.
(C) SALES OR USE
TAX.--For purposes of subparagraph (B), the term "sales
or use tax" means a tax that is imposed on or incident
to the sale, purchase, storage, consumption, distribution, or
other use of tangible personal property or services as may be
defined by laws imposing such tax and which is measured by
the amount of the sales price or other charge for such
property or service.
(7) STATE.--The term
"State" means any of the several States, the District
of Columbia, or any commonwealth, territory, or possession of the
United States.
(8) TAX.--
(A) IN GENERAL.--The
term "tax" means--
(i) any charge
imposed by any governmental entity for the purpose of
generating revenues for governmental purposes, and is not
a fee imposed for a specific privilege, service, or
benefit conferred; or
(ii) the imposition
on a seller of an obligation to collect and to remit to a
governmental entity any sales or use tax imposed on a
buyer by a governmental entity.
(B) EXCEPTION.--Such
term does not include any franchise fee or similar fee
imposed by a State or local franchising authority, pursuant
to section 622 or 653 of the Communications Act of 1934 (47
U.S.C. 542, 573), or any other fee related to obligations or
telecommunications carriers under the Communications Act of
1934 (47 U.S.C. 151 et seq.).
(9) TELECOMMUNICATIONS.--The
term "telecommunications service" has the meaning given
such term in section 3(46) of the Communications Act of 1934 (47
U.S.C. 153(46)) and includes communications services (as defined
in section 4251 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986).
(10) TAX ON INTEREST
ACCESS.--The term "tax on Internet access" means a tax
on Internet access, including the enforcement or application of
any new or preexisting tax on the sale or use of Internet
services unless such tax was generally imposed and actually
enforced prior to October 1, 1998.
TITLE--OTHER PROVISIONS
SEC.__01. DECLARATION THAT
INTERNET SHOULD BE
FREE OR NEW FEDERAL TAXES.
It is the sense of Congress
that no new Federal taxes similar to the taxes described in
section__01(a) [refers to first section of preceding title]
should be enacted with respect to the Internet and Internet
access during the moratorium provided in such section.
SEC.__02. NATIONAL TRADE
ESTIMATE.
Section 181 of the Trade Act
of 1974 (19 U.S.C. 2241) is amended
(1) in subsection
(a)(1)--
(A) in subparagraph
(A)--
(i) by striking
"and" at the end of clause (i);
(ii) by
inserting "and" at the end of clause (ii);
and
(iii) by
inserting after clause (ii) the following new clause:
"(iii)
United States electronic commerce,"; and
(B) in subparagraph
(C)--
(i) by striking
"and" at the end of clause (i);
(ii) by
inserting "and" at the end of clause (ii);
(iii) by
inserting after clause (ii) the following new clause:
(iii) the value
of additional United States electronic
commerce,"; and
(iv) by
inserting "or transacted with," after
"or invested in";
(2) in subsection
(a)(2)(E)--
(A) by striking
"and" at the end of clause (i);
(B) by inserting
"and" at the end of clause (ii); and
(C) by inserting
after clause (ii) the following new clause:
"(iii) the
value of electronic commerce transacted with,";
and
(3) by adding at the end
the following new subsection:
"(d) ELECTRONIC
COMMERCE.--For purpose of this section, the term
'electronic commerce' has the meaning given that term in
section ___04(3) of the Internet Tax Freedom Act.".
SEC.___03. DECLARATION THAT
THE INTTERNET SHOULD BE FREE OF FOREIGN TARIFFS, TRADE BARRIERS,
AND OTHER RESTRICTIONS.
(a) IN GENERAL.-- It is the
sense of Congress that the President should seek bilateral,
regional, and multilateral agreements to remove barrier to global
electronic commerce through the World Trade Organization and
Development, the Trans-Atlantic Economic Partnership, the Asia
Pacific Economic Cooperation forum, the Free Trade Area of the
America, the North American Free Trade Agreement, and other
appropriate venues.
(b) NEGOTIATING
OBJECTIVES.--The negotiating objectives of the United States
shall be--
(1) to assure that
electronic commerce is free from--
(A) tariff and
nontariff barriers;
(B) burdensome and
discriminatory regulation and standards; and
(C) discriminatory
taxation; and
(2) to accelerate the
growth of electronic commerce by expanding market access
opportunities for--
(A) the development
of telecommunications infrastructure;
(B) the procurement
of telecommunications equipment;
(C) the provision of
Interact access and telecommunications services; and
(D) the exchange of
goods, services, and digitalized information.
(c) ELECTRONIC
COMMERCE.--For purposes of this section, the term
"electronic commerce" has the meaning given that term
in section ___04(3).
SEC. ___04. NO EXPANSION OF
TAX AUTHORITY.
Nothing in this title shall
be construed to expand the duty. of any person to collect or pay
taxes beyond that which existed immediately before the date of
the enactment of this Act.
SEC. ___05. PRESERVATION OF
AUTHORITY.
Nothing in this title shall
limit or otherwise affect the implementation of the
Telecommunications Act of 1996 (Public Law 104-104) or the
amendments made by such Act.
SEC. ___06. SEVERABILITY.
If any provision of this
title, or any amendment made by this title, or the application of
that provision to any person or circumstance, is held by a court
of competent jurisdiction to violate any provision of the
Constitution of the United States, then the other provisions of
that rifle, and the application of that provision to other
persons and circumstances, shall not be affected.