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Showing posts with label CNN Money. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CNN Money. Show all posts

Friday, January 12, 2018

Tax Bill Gives People More Money

By Jeanne Sahadi and Katie Lobosco, CNN Money
(CNN Money) — The U.S. Treasury and the IRS on Thursday put out new guidance and withholding tables for employers that incorporate changes from the new tax law.
Under those new tables, the Treasury estimates that 90% of people who get a paycheck are likely to see more in take-home pay, as soon as February. Employers will have until Feb. 15 to incorporate the changes in their payroll systems.
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But for many taxpayers, they will need to assess whether the new tables really are withholding enough money so that they’re not saddled with a big bill when they file their taxes next year.
The major changes affecting individuals include new tax brackets, (mostly) lower income tax rates, a near-doubling of the standard deduction and the elimination of both personal exemptions as well as many itemized deductions.
The new tables are designed not only to best approximate the change in workers’ tax liability under the new law, but to do so in a way that “delivers benefits as soon as possible to as many people as possible with as little disruption as possible,” a senior Treasury official told reporters.
The IRS is not issuing new Form W-4s … yet. “We’ve constructed the tables so that most people should be accurately withheld if they leave their W-4 in place,” a senior IRS official noted.
The plan is to have new W-4s by 2019. Personal exemptions are a core feature of the current withholding system, but now that they are eliminated, “it’s necessary to build a new approach to withholding, which will take some time,” the senior IRS official said.
In the meantime, he urged filers who have complicated tax situations — i.e., anyone who is not single, childless and holding down just one job — to review the number of allowances they currently take on their W4s once the IRS puts out its new withholding calculator by the end of February.
Such a calculator will ask for anonymous inputs — for example, your income, number of dependents and other pieces of information that help determine whether you might be eligible for various tax breaks.
“We would encourage every taxpayer to run their information through the calculator. Then they can decide what they want to do,” the senior IRS official said.
That’s not bad advice for any year when there are big tax changes but it’s especially critical this year.
Most people fill out their W-4 form when they’re hired at a new job and don’t change it unless they get married, have kids, get divorced or experience other life-changing situations.
And roughly three-quarters of tax filers are overwithheld because they take too few allowances. And that results in a refund when they file their tax returns. The IRS doesn’t expect that to change much under the new tax law given the preference filers have shown for getting big refunds, rather than just breaking even or having to cut a new check to Uncle Sam when they file their returns.
Too good to be true?
Democrats are concerned the rushed withholding tables could leave many tax filers in a situation of potentially being underwithheld for tax year 2018 and therefore left owing money when they file their tax returns in early 2019.
“Republicans are using brute force and speed to implement a law that will deliver a financial blow to hardworking Americans all across the country,” Sen. Ron Wyden, the top Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee, said in a statement.
Earlier this week, Wyden and Rep. Richard Neal, the top Democrat on the House tax-writing committee, asked the Government Accountability Office to analyze the new IRS tables to see if they might lead to systematic underwithholding of federal taxes from paychecks.
“I look forward to GAO’s independent review of these tables, which will expose whether the Trump administration is tampering with Americans’ paychecks, resulting in a whopping tax bill next year,” Wyden said.
The GAO has said Wyden’s request must go through its usual review process before a decision to proceed is made.
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin at the White House press briefing on Thursday dismissed suspicions that administration is “juicing” the tables as a “ridiculous charge.”
— CNNMoney’s Donna Borak contributed to this report

Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Ashley Madison Info Is Now Available. Is Your Spouse Cheating On You?



Now you can search the Ashley Madison cheaters list








It was only a matter of time.

The stolen database of 32 million people who used cheating website Ashley 
Madison has made its way to the Web. And it's easily searchable on several
websites.
Just plug in a name or email address,
and you'll find out if someone who
signed up for the service.
CNNMoney is not linking to these
sites directly, but they can be found
via regular Web searches -- if you
know exactly what to look for.
Usually, hacked data is difficult to reach or sort through. Stolen files
 are posted on the Dark Web (which requires a special
web browser called Tor). And they're traded on file-sharing
 platforms (which also requires special software and clicking
 on dubious downloads).
But now anyone can check if his or her spouse was cheating --
just by filling out a form.
Someone has even created a custom Google Map that
displays some of AshleyMadison.com users' addresses
registered with the website.


ashley madison map

Some people were idiotic enough to sign up using company and
government work email addresses, making them especially easy
to positively identify. Our quick review found 6,904 addresses
linked to the Canadian and American governments, plus
another 7,239 in the U.S. Army, 3,531 in the Navy, 1,114 Marines
and 628 in the Air Force.
But it's difficult to verify the accuracy of these searching tools.
But at least one tool, which searches by email address, returns
 accurate results. CNNMoney verified this by plugging in email
addresses of users it has independently verified.
The danger of being exposed is real.
Many of the cheaters exposed in this hack serve in the U.S. military,
 evident because they used email addresses that end in the .mil
domain. Adultery does, in fact, violate Uniform Code of Military
Justice. It's a prosecutable offense that can land you a year in
confinement and a dishonorable discharge.
What about people who used Ashley Madison to engage in
gay affairs? The website's users were worldwide, and there are
 79 countries where homosexuality is illegal. In Afghanistan,
Iran, Mauritania, Nigeria, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United
Arab Emirates, the punishment is death.
A quick search of a small subset of Ashley Madison users
 listed two in the United Arab Emirates. Their addresses are
 most likely legitimate, because they were tied to the credit
card they used to pay for the service, according to one
computer researcher.
The Ashley Madison hack includes customer names,
credit card data, physical addresses and sexual preferences.
Some users were smart enough to use fake names.
 But financial data is legitimate. And in total, the data makes
it easy to hunt someone down.


ashley madison search
One of the search tools that lets you find people who used Ashley Madison's website.

This information is incredibly revealing. For example, the
 database shows if a person was listed as a married "male
seeking male" with a "someone I can teach" sexual fantasy l
ooking for a "boy next door." Or an "attached female seeking
male" with a "spanking" fantasy seeking "a Don Juan."
The listed sexual fantasies range from master/slave relationships
 to cross dressing and exhibitionism.
This hack proves that you need to exercise extreme caution
if you're going to share your deepest, darkest secrets. Using
your real name or payment information is a hazard. No website
is impenetrable. Few websites practice good security standards.
 Even major American banks use second-rate security.
AshleyMadison.com had it even worse. As a hive of cheaters,
 it has long been the antagonist of betrayed spouses. It was an
inevitable target for hackers. And the company behind the website,
 Avid Life Media, knew it couldn't protect user data.
That's why, in the fine print, Ashley Madison says, "We
cannot ensure the security or privacy of information you
 provide through the Internet." Compare that to the lofty
promise it makes on the website front door for "100% discreet service."
Is your information on the dark web?
Is your information on the dark web?