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Apple Releases Statement Ahead of Tim Cook’s Senate Appearance on Tax Policy

Apple today released a statement [PDF] ahead of Apple CEO Tim Cook, CFO Peter Oppenheimer, and head of tax operations Phillip A. Bullock’s appearances in front of the U.S. Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigation tomorrow.

In the seventeen page statement, Apple notes that it has created hundreds of thousands of jobs in the United States — both directly and through suppliers and contractors. It notes that the company paid nearly $6 billion in federal taxes in fiscal 2012 and the company expects to pay $7 billion in 2013.

The company also says Apple “does not use tax gimmicks”, pushing back against reporting in The New York Times that examined Apple’s international tax strategies.

Subcommittee

Apple, a California company, employs tens of thousands of Americans, creates revolutionary products that improve the lives of tens of millions of Americans, and pays billions of dollars annually to the US Treasury in corporate income and payroll taxes. Apple’s shareholders – from individuals and institutions to pension funds and public employee retirement systems – have benefitted from the Company’s success through the appreciation of its stock price and generous dividends. Apple safeguards the capital entrusted to it by its shareholders with prudent management that reflects the Company’s extensive international operations. Apple complies fully with both the laws and spirit of the laws. And Apple pays all its required taxes, both in this country and abroad.

Apple reiterates repeatedly that all of its financial activities are fully legal and in the best interests of its shareholders. The company says it supports comprehensive reform of the U.S. corporate tax system, instead proposing a new system that is “revenue neutral, eliminates all tax expenditures, lowers tax rates and implements a reasonable tax on foreign earnings that allows free movement of capital back to the US.” Apple notes that this would likely result in the company paying even more in corporate tax, but supports it nonetheless.

The document includes an extensive history of the company, as well as fairly extensive details about Apple’s corporate structure and tax practices, including details about Apple’s sales and use tax payments ($1.3 billion in FY2012), state income tax payments ($830 million), and Apple’s contributions to employer payroll taxes ($327 million).

It lays out Apple’s network of foreign subsidiaries, including several located in Ireland which distribute ‘active foreign, post-tax income as dividend payments within Apple’s foreign corporate structure’.

Apple wants to make clear to the Subcommittee that the Company does not use its Irish subsidiaries or any other entities to engage in the following tax practices that were the focus of the Subcommittee’s September 20, 2012 hearing, entitled Offshore Profit Shifting and the US Tax Code. Specifically, Apple does not move its intellectual property into offshore tax havens and use it to sell products back into the US to avoid US tax, nor does it use revolving loans from CFCs to fund its domestic operations. Apple does not hold money on a Caribbean island, does not have a bank account in the Cayman Islands, and does not move any taxable revenue from sales to US customers to other jurisdictions in order to avoid US taxation.

The statement continues in some detail, examining Apple’s various international holdings and how the company uses them to fund international expansion of retail stores and other investments.

It also notes that analysis of its decision to issue $17 billion in debt to fund share repurchases and dividends, rather than repatriating foreign earnings, “was in its shareholders’ best interests”.

Apple CEO Tim Cook and CFO Peter Oppenheimer will appear at 9:30AM Eastern time in front of the U.S. Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigation. The hearing, titled “Offshore Profit Shifting and the U.S. Tax Code – Part 2” will be in the Dirksen Senate Office Building. The subcommittee is attached to the U.S. Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Government Affairs.

Other witnesses at the hearing include tax policy experts from the IRS and the Department of the Treasury, as well as professors from Harvard and Villanova.

Note: Due to the political nature of the discussion regarding this topic, the comment thread is located in our Politics, Religion, Social Issues forum. All MacRumors forum members and site visitors are welcome to read and follow the thread, but posting is limited to forum members with at least 100 posts.


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Apple releases Senate testimony as panel announces it avoided billions in taxes

A Congressional panel has found that Apple avoided billions in taxes, the New York Times reports, thanks to an intricate network of subsidiaries throughout the globe. The structure of some of these sub-companies in certain countries made them exempt from paying or filing taxes or record-keeping laws.

The Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations found that kept $ 74 billion from the IRS between 2009 and 2012. Apple is not charged, however, with breaking any laws.

Apple has published the full text of its upcoming testimony to the Senate congressional panel, which it’s scheduled to make on Tuesday. Among those to testify include CEO Tim Cook. Cook spoke with The Washington Post last week about his ideas to repatriate some of those billions, and points out that the company is focused on creating jobs in the U.S. and most likely will pay $ 7 billion in taxes to the U.S. in 2013.

Apple releases Senate testimony as panel announces it avoided billions in taxes originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Mon, 20 May 2013 18:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog

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Agile Partners releases Lick of the Day 2.0

“Wait, who’s Brett Terpstra? Does that guy still write here?” Yes, he does, on special occasions. The release of Lick of the Day 2.0 seemed like a decent reason to come out of hiding.

Lick of the Day is an app from Agile Partners for iPhone and iPad which teaches guitar players new skills in an easy to digest video and interactive format (see previous coverage by Matt Tinsley). With each lesson you get a high-quality video that includes explanations, fast and slow versions as well as tips for making the most of picking patterns and finger positions. Each lick also includes tab/notation, text narrative and backing tracks for practicing. The live fingerboard representation as the tab plays for you is one of my favorite parts of the app.

In version 2, Agile partners with TrueFire to include 20 new Lick Packs that cover 500 blues, rock, jazz, rockabilly and acoustic lessons. Basically, if you play guitar, there’s something there to enhance your ability, whether you’re just getting started or a seasoned pro. They don’t talk down to you; they present the music theory and techniques while building from the simple to the highly skilled, with enough instruction on the way to get you there.

My personal guitar skills have enhanced ten-fold over the last year, due in large part to this app. I’m excited to see all of the new content and features coming out in such a valuable part of my music toolkit. Check out Lick of the Day in the App Store. It’s free, with each “Lick Pack” being an in-app purchase ($ 2.99 US) with free samples from the pack to try out before purchasing.

Agile Partners releases Lick of the Day 2.0 originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Mon, 20 May 2013 13:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog

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Apple releases iTunes 11.0.3 with new MiniPlayer, improved Songs View

Apple on Thursday released a new version of its iTunes media suite, with a new MiniPlayer featuring artwork and a progress bar, along with an improved Songs View.





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Pebble receives $15 mil in funding, releases SDK and Sports API

The company behind the Pebble smartwatch, which not only looks awesome but connects up to your iPhone, has picked up $ 15 million in funding from venture capitalists, and has released yet another version of its SDK. The funding is obviously a solid chunk of change, and should help Pebble not only fulfill its current orders (the company is still aiming to get watches out to all of its supporters from a successful Kickstarter bid), but push the company on into the future as well.

This latest SDK release, called the PebbleKit, allows for two-way communication back and forth between the watch and your smartphone, which means there are lots of new options for apps to work with the watch as a display or even a remote control. The company has also released a Sports API, which should allow for GPS-enabled apps (like running apps) to send and receive information from the watch. Pebble’s initial set of features was quite limited, but this API update should make a lot of new apps possible, and of course we’ll likely see more in the future.

You can pre-order a Pebble watch on the main website right now for $ 150.00. Or you may want to wait just a bit longer, if you happen to believe those crazy rumors about an Apple iWatch.

Pebble receives $ 15 mil in funding, releases SDK and Sports API originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Thu, 16 May 2013 16:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog

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Amazon releases Amazon Cloud Drive Photos to compete with Apple Photo Stream

Amazon today released a new app called Cloud Drive Photos. The free app allows you to upload all your iPhone or iPod touch photos to the cloud. The images can be accessed from your iOS device, from your Mac, or from any web browser. You can also upload photos from a laptop or desktop computer with a free Amazon app for OS X, and see or download them to your iPhone or other iOS device. Photos can also be shared via Facebook, Twitter or email.

Amazon requires you have an Amazon account, and will provide 5 GB of free storage, about enough room for 2000 photos. Amazon also provides both Mac and Windows apps to handle file transfers and display the photos. Additional storage space costs US$ 10.00 a year for 20 gigabytes, or 100 gigabytes of storage for $ 50.00.

When you first open the app, Amazon asks for access to your camera roll. Then the app will start uploading as long as the app is open. If you’re on a limited data plan, you can set the app to only upload when you are on WiFi.

This service competes with Apple’s Photo Stream service, and of course there are services like Flickr and Dropbox that provide similar functionality. You can choose to back up specific photos or your entire camera roll. Amazon offers more free storage than Apple, and Apple will only store up to 1000 of your photos for 30 days compared to about 2000 photos with no expiration from Amazon. With Apple, after 30 days you must sync to your main computer. I see the Amazon service as a nice extra backup to what Apple offers.

Apple is being challenged in several areas by competitors offering equal or better solutions. Of course Google has Google Maps, and even Yahoo has a free weather app that for many people is a better solution than the rather stale Apple iOS weather app. Amazon has also offered Cloud Drive File Sync for OS X, which gives users a free 5 gigabytes of storage, more than double the free storage offered by Dropbox. Of course only Apple can deeply integrate its apps into iOS, so the company has that advantage. Whether that integration overcomes some of the advantages of these new services will be up to you when considering what cloud solution to use. Also, be aware that if you are already using other Amazon Cloud services the free storage you get is 5 gigabytes total, not 5 for music, 5 for photos, 5 for files etc..

Amazon releases Amazon Cloud Drive Photos to compete with Apple Photo Stream originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Fri, 10 May 2013 23:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog

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Apple releases Thunderbolt Firmware Update v1.2

If you have a Thunderbolt-equipped Mac—lucky you!—it’s time to back up your data and set a little bit of time aside to download and run Thunderbolt Firmware Update v1.2, released by Apple on Thursday.

According to Apple, the update is a stability fix for Thunderbolt and Target Disk Mode. The update is a scant 1.2MB in size and requires OS X 10.8.3 or later.

If you have a Mac laptop, be sure to plug it in before you run the update. During the installation, your Mac will restart and the screen will go gray with a status indication bar.

Macworld

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Apple releases Thunderbolt Firmware Update v1.2

If you have a Thunderbolt-equipped Mac—lucky you!—it’s time to back up your data and set a little bit of time aside to download and run Thunderbolt Firmware Update v1.2, released by Apple on Thursday.

According to Apple, the update is a stability fix for Thunderbolt and Target Disk Mode. The update is a scant 1.2MB in size and requires OS X 10.8.3 or later.

If you have a Mac laptop, be sure to plug it in before you run the update. During the installation, your Mac will restart and the screen will go gray with a status indication bar.

Macworld

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Zynga releases Running With Friends, from Eat Sleep Play

Zynga has released a new game in the ‘With Friends’ series (which started back when the company acquired Words with Friends, a very popular Scrabble-like iOS game). Running With Friends is, as you can see above, not a fitness app, though that does sound fun. Instead, it’s an endless running game, based on the Running of the Bulls, where you compete with friends to earn points and distance. The game has you running, jumping, and dodging obstacles, all while trying to earn as many points as possible.

As you might expect, the title is freemium, so it’s free to download, and there are in-app purchases available if you’d like extra currency. Most of the games in the “With Friends” series have been super casual so far (mostly word games and simple social titles), so it’s interesting to see that Zynga is upping the ante on the gameplay just a bit. Plus, this title is developed by Eat Sleep Play, a company founded by David Jaffe that previously worked on the Twisted Metal games. “With Friends” hasn’t seen a lot of action lately (though it’s still a fairly big brand for Zynga), so this may be an attempt to revitalize the offerings.

Zynga releases Running With Friends, from Eat Sleep Play originally appeared on TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Thu, 09 May 2013 17:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TUAW – The Unofficial Apple Weblog

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WebKit releases new SunSpider 1.0 benchmark to chart the future of JavaScript performance

Apple’s WebKit team has released a revamped new SunSpider 1.0 benchmark suite for profiling the performance of web browser JavaScript execution, replacing the 0.9 version initially released at the end of 2007.





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