Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Review of SEO SpyGlass 5.0.3

I recently tested out the software SEO SpyGlass which is part of the SEO Powersuite. SEO SpyGlass is a simple-to-use backlink checker. If you want to do well in SEO you have to understand the importance of keeping track of your competitors back-linking strategies. SEO SpyGlass can help you do that and also help you find high-quality links for your website.

SEO SpyGlass helps you see, on your own computer, what strategies your competitors have employed and this data is what you need to create a winning strategy of your own. This important information is for you to keep private and wont be published online for others to see. This is a plus.

SEO SpyGlass answers some pretty serious questions:

SEO SpyGlass Software Key Features:

Background Data on Software

Step one of the process, add a URL of a competitor. If you chose next without the show expert options checked you were given some basic information to start. I chose to not check it for test one.

The software then asked if I wanted to update search engine data.

I, of course, said yes and was given many options to choose from. I was also given the chance to add more backlink factors of my own. Some factors you dont see in the image below:

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Review of SEO SpyGlass 5.0.3

IoM Intends No Tax On Capital Gains

29 February 2012

The Isle of Man has no intention of introducing taxes on capital gains, the island's Treasury Minister, Eddie Teare has confirmed, clarifying the situation following the removal of the island's deemed distribution regime.

Following an investigation by the European Union Code of Conduct Group on Business Taxation, the Isle of Man agreed to remove its Attribution Regime for Individuals from April 2012 to ensure that the territory meets international standards.

Teare said that the abolition of the attribution regime had removed provisions deemed 'harmful', allowing the territory to retain its zero/ten corporate tax regime. Due to the changes, company profits can only be taxed when paid out as dividends received by Isle of Man shareholders rather than on a deemed distribution basis, ie. with tax chargeable regardless of whether a distribution is made, based on the shareholders' cut of the company's profits in a given year.

Teare said that, to combat tax avoidance as a result of the regime's removal, Practice Note 174/12 was released to outline changes to make more strict the tax treatment of an income distribution to prevent individuals from employing tax planning to avoid the payment of income taxes. However the government has clarified that, contrary to erroneous reports, a charge to income tax will not arise to shareholders when capital gains made by a company are distributed.

Teare said: "It has come to my attention that unacceptable tax planning was being contemplated and I had to take steps to ensure that tax due on income, not capital gains, was paid. This is not an attempt to introduce a form of capital gains tax; nothing is further from my mind, the minister confirmed.

The Isle of Man's attribution regime was introduced in 2008 under The Income Tax (Attributed Profits) Temporary Taxation Order 2007 (Statutory Document 928/07), following approval by the island's legislative assembly the Tynwald in December 2007.

The removal of the regime was announced in Budget 2011, and is effective from April 2012.

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IoM Intends No Tax On Capital Gains

Cayman Islands Ministry of Tourism Continues Scholarship Program for Students Planning Careers in Tourism

Scholarship represents the Governments effort to facilitate more Caymanian involvement in the tourism industry

(PRWEB) February 29, 2012

Since its inception in 1996, this annual scholarship has awarded over 95 students either full or partial scholarships. Many of these students have gone on to work full time in the tourism industry, and some of the Ministrys graduates now hold senior positions at the Department of Tourism and other tourism establishments, most notably the Department of Tourisms Director, Shomari Scott, acting.

One of the primary goals of the online scholarship is to attract a steady stream of skilled and enthusiastic tourism professionals who can actively contribute to the future prosperity of the tourism sector. The Ministry and Department of Tourism are working hard to achieve this through the Scholarship Program and through other initiatives such as the Tourism Apprenticeship Training Program.

Local students were awarded MOT scholarships in disciplines such as Marketing, Public Relations and Communications, Tourism and Environmental Management, Hotel Management, Travel Tourism and Hospitality and the Visual Arts at universities and colleges in the US, England and Canada.

For further information about the scholarship program please contact Ms. Dianne Conolly at the Department of Tourism by telephone at 244-1252 or by email at dconolly(at)caymanislands(dot)ky.

About WizeHive

WizeHive offers a cloud-based platform that automates an organizations forms, workflows and business processes. These tools have been used to automate contests with WizeHive's Online Contest Software; scholarships with WizeHive's Scholarship Management Software; sales processes and more.

About Cayman Islands Ministry of Tourism

The Department of Tourism was established in 1974 and falls under the mandate of the Ministry of Financial Services, Tourism and Development. This Ministry organises and directs the activities for many departments all of which have similar goals; to protect the environment, support the economy, promote the islands as a premier destination for visitors and to support local businesses and business people.

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Cayman Islands Ministry of Tourism Continues Scholarship Program for Students Planning Careers in Tourism

The More Tax Plans, the Better

For months, Governor Jerry Brown has been calling on supporters of rival tax measures to abandon theirs in favor of his. Brown has argued that if there are multiple tax proposals on the November ballot, voters will reject all of them out of frustration or confusion. It's highly debatable as to whether the governor's argument is correct, but if it is, then it's becoming clear that his tax proposal, perhaps the most regressive of the three vying for the ballot, is the one that should be dropped.

According to the newest Field Poll, Brown's proposal, which includes a modest tax on the rich and a sales tax increase that will impact low- and middle-income families, only garners 58-percent approval. By contrast, the so-called Millionaire's Tax, which targets people earning more than $1 million annually and which Brown believes should be abandoned, enjoys 63-percent approval.

Clearly, the sales tax portion of Brown's plan is hurting its chances. The Field Poll shows that only 30 percent of voters approve of raising sales taxes to help balance the state budget. It's no wonder. As the Express has reported, sales taxes unfairly target the 99 Percent, who already pay higher effective tax rates in California than the wealthy. In short, the Millionaire's Tax appears to have the best shot at winning in November, and if Brown really wants more revenues for state government, and truly believes that voters will reject multiple measures, then he should drop his own.

"The Field poll shows the Millionaire's Tax has the best chance of passage. This is the fifth poll that confirms the Millionaire's Tax has the strongest support from the people of California," Joshua Pechthalt, president of the California Federation of Teachers, said in a statement last week. "We share the governor's and the PTA's goals of producing new revenue for education and essential services. We believe our measure is the best way to reach that goal."

The California Federation of Teachers and the California Nurses Association, which are sponsoring the Millionaire's Tax, have repeatedly refused Brown's call to drop their measure. They also are not as worried as he is about voters being frustrated with multiple measures on the ballot.

Mark DiCamillo, head of the Field Poll, isn't worried either. DiCamillo, a veteran political observer, told the San Francisco Chronicle that multiple tax measures might work in concert to convince voters that at least one should be approved. DiCamillo noted that in 1998 voters approved a landmark auto insurance reform initiative, even though there were five competing measures on the ballot. "That shows it can be done," DiCamillo said.

There's another good reason for having multiple tax measures in November. Large corporations and wealthy special interests may be less inclined to fund an opposition campaign against the Millionaire's Tax if they can support another tax on the ballot. And so far that appears to be happening. Numerous big companies and wealthy special interests have been pouring large donations into Brown's measure. They appear to like the fact that it targets the 99 Percent as well as the rich. And if Brown decides to push forward with his proposal, even though it trails the Millionaire's Tax in the polls, it might help siphon money that would otherwise be used to attack the Millionaire's Tax.

Oakland Scientist in Climate-Change Flap

On February 14, a series of leaked documents appeared on the Internet, outlining the rather brazen strategies of Chicago-based libertarian think-tank The Heartland Institute to discount evidence of global warming. The leak became an international story. Speculation on the documents' source and veracity ran rampant, until last week when research scientist Peter Gleick, co-founder and president of the Oakland-based Pacific Institute, admitted in an article in the Huffington Post to having obtained the documents through the use of a false identity.

In the article, Gleick explained that he used someone else's name to obtain the documents in order to verify the accuracy of a memo leaked to him by an anonymous source. And he expressed regret at having done so: "My judgment was blinded by my frustration with the ongoing efforts often anonymous, well-funded, and coordinated to attack climate science and scientists and prevent this debate, and by the lack of transparency of the organizations involved," he wrote. "Nevertheless I deeply regret my own actions in this case. I offer my personal apologies to all those affected."

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The More Tax Plans, the Better

Brentwood Gazette published £1.5m in council tax uncollected by borough

BRENTWOOD residents owe nearly 1.5 million in unpaid council tax.

Ratepayers currently owe 1,465,991.38, with some dating as far back as April 1993, when the tax was introduced by John Major's Conservative Government.

Brentwood Borough Council

Of this sum, 1,084,833.62 is owed to Essex County Council, which receives 74 per cent of all council tax revenue.

Brentwood Borough Council is due 12 per cent of the total, or 175,918.97.

The rest of the outstanding money is due to be split between the county's police and fire authorities, plus the nine parish councils in the borough of Brentwood.

The news emerged following a Freedom of Information request to Brentwood Borough Council, which is responsible for collecting all council tax in the town and surrounding villages.

At present, there are 32,203 ratepayers in the borough.

Our revelation comes in the wake of the borough council's decision to cut its council tax precept by 2.1 per cent from April.

Campaign group the TaxPayers' Alliance urged the council to pursue the hardcore who refuse to pay council tax.

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Brentwood Gazette published £1.5m in council tax uncollected by borough