Примери за използване на Link tax на Английски и техните преводи на Български
{-}
-
Colloquial
-
Official
-
Medicine
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Computer
The Link Tax”.
Link tax” a danger to free linking. .
Article 11 refers to the so-called‘link tax'.
Articles 11(link tax) and 13(upload filter) are under the spotlight.
European Parliament endorses upload filters and“link tax”.
The so-called"link tax" and the"upload filter"(Articles 11 and 13) have caught the spotlight.
The Verge- EU approves controversial Copyright Directive, including internet'link tax' and'upload filter'.
Article 11 and 13 have been called the“link tax” and the“upload filter” respectively by detractors.
Of particular controversy are Articles 11 and13 of the Directive,“which critics have dubbed‘the link tax' and‘upload filter.'”.
For example, in Germany and Spain, the link tax was previously introduced but failed in both countries.
But the most controversial aspects of the law are two provisions, originally known as articles 11 and 13 andreferred to as the“link tax” and“upload filter” respectively by opponents.
Critics, though, have labelled it a"link tax" which would hand new, broad rights to large publishers and hurt smaller start-ups.
The provisions of the Copyright Directive that attracted the most media attention- Article 11 or the'link tax' and Article 13 or the'upload filter'- have remained largely intact.
Article 11(dubbed the“link tax”) would give publishers and papers a way to make money when companies like Google link to their stories, allowing them to demand paid licenses.
On the one hand, similar initiatives to introduce such a“link tax” in Germany and Spain have already failed.
Unfortunately, the opponents of Article 11(the“link tax”) and Article 13(the copyright filters) are not united on their opposition- they have different ideas about what they would like to see done with these provisions.
The most controversial clauses of the Copyright Directive- Article 11 or the‘link tax' and Article 13- have remained pretty much intact.
Like many other recent EU initiatives, the“Link Tax” targets online giants such as Google, Facebook, and Twitter in an attempt to share some of their colossal earnings with those they depend on.
While there are hundreds of written pages about the General Data Protection Regulation, better known as GDPR, alongside the dozens of training sessions given and at least as many jokes told,the newly introduced so-called link tax and the introduction of automatic filters on information will have at least the same impact on the future of the Internet if adopted in their current state.
Critics have regularly described Article 11 as a"link tax," since it gave companies the right to charge sites like Google for merely including content with links, even if it's just a brief snippet to show the user what they're seeing.
The most controversial articles of the Copyright Directive are Article 15(the so-called‘link tax', previously Article 11) and Article 17(the upload filter, previous article 13).
Article 11 proposes a“link tax” that would force anyone using even small snippets of published text to obtain a licence from the publisher first, while Article 13 would make platforms responsible for installing automated content filters to ensure that material uploaded by their users does not infringe copyright.
France's law requires Google to pay what has been called a"link tax"-- effectively a license to display excerpts of press articles on Google News.
Two of its key components are Article 11, dubbed the"link tax," which forces news aggregation and search sites to pay publishers for showing news snippets or linking to news stories on other sites, and Article 13, which mandates upload filters for online platforms to prevent copyright-protected material from being illegally posted.
National governments failed to agree on a common position on the two most controversial articles, Article 11,also known as the Link Tax, and Article 13, which would require online platforms to use upload filters in an attempt to prevent copyright infringement before it happens.
Civil society organizations have called the new right a“link tax” and have expressed serious concerns on the effect it will have on online citing for personal and journalistic purposes.
This surprising turn of events does not mean the end of Link Tax or censorship machines, but it does make an adoption of the copyright directive before the European elections in May less likely.
At the beginning of the table there is a link to New Tax function(to page New Tax). .
The Commission is currently working on developing a common corporate tax base that establishes a link between the amount of tax paid and the place where profits are made.
Follow the link below to order your tax return transcript.