The IRS Tax Filing Software TurboTax Is Trying to Kill Just Got Open Sourced
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A HUD is a HUD
sure but the HUD from the F-35 is very specifically designed to work in an F-35. It's very similar, and comes from the same family, as the software running on other planes. But it's not identical.
And yes, performance limits would be hard coded into the software because the HUD needs to alert the pilot when they are getting close.
Edit: and that's ignoring the fact that a lot of this stuff comes from private companies so you'll run into things like IP/patent laws
If it's developed for the government, even by a private contractor, it's still considered US government code and is public domain. It's why sqlite is public domain.
I personally doubt there's much available in the off-the-shelf fighter HUD system market, personally.
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For the most part they are. You can find enormous troves of classified documents that have been made public, and a huge amount of once top secret technology and engineering eventually makes its way into the public space.
Yeah, they get open sourced by publishing them over the usual channels during disputes on the War Thunder discord server.
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Direct File is maintained by the IRS themselves though.
Trump's 'big beautiful bill' would officially kill the IRS's free direct-tax filing tool
Republicans have wanted to end IRS Direct File for years, calling it wasteful and an example of government overreach.
Business Insider (www.businessinsider.com)
Will it continue to be?
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You are correct.
Here's an annoying thing i just learned about H&R Block:
As of 2022, H&R Block's tax preparation service shares user data with Facebook, which can be used for targeted advertising. This can include sensitive financial information from health savings accounts and college expenses, and this tax data is shared without consent even for users who opt out of the service.
This pisses me off so much.
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We've already got free software for filing taxes, kthxbye!
Oh that's good to know what's it's called
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Yeah I saw Monopoly Fortnite I wonder what is next?
I know, what are they making next? Lord of the Rings edition? Star Wars? Oh the humanities.
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A HUD is a HUD
sure but the HUD from the F-35 is very specifically designed to work in an F-35. It's very similar, and comes from the same family, as the software running on other planes. But it's not identical.
And yes, performance limits would be hard coded into the software because the HUD needs to alert the pilot when they are getting close.
Edit: and that's ignoring the fact that a lot of this stuff comes from private companies so you'll run into things like IP/patent laws
For the F35 unfortunately a lot of its capabilities seems to be cloud based. (At least for maintenence, I don't know of on the air).
That's why I'm angry my stupid government still has wants to buy the stupid things instead of sitting this generation out and going to an own 6gen aircraft.
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It's already got 4 PRs
lol
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hahahahahaha!
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You are correct.
Here's an annoying thing i just learned about H&R Block:
As of 2022, H&R Block's tax preparation service shares user data with Facebook, which can be used for targeted advertising. This can include sensitive financial information from health savings accounts and college expenses, and this tax data is shared without consent even for users who opt out of the service.
Do you have a source we can reference for that particular bit of shitbaggery?
Edit: congressional report on the shit bags in question:
https://www.classaction.org/media/hartz-v-taxact-inc-congressional-report.pdf
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Perhaps i should have said hot, but seriously; more fun to not.
So you're saying he's really really ugly
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So you're saying he's really really ugly
Was more tjinking about takes.
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For the F35 unfortunately a lot of its capabilities seems to be cloud based. (At least for maintenence, I don't know of on the air).
That's why I'm angry my stupid government still has wants to buy the stupid things instead of sitting this generation out and going to an own 6gen aircraft.
Aren't all planes cloud based though?
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Do you have a source we can reference for that particular bit of shitbaggery?
Edit: congressional report on the shit bags in question:
https://www.classaction.org/media/hartz-v-taxact-inc-congressional-report.pdf
Wikipedia
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The more money you pay someone to find the loop holes in the tax code the less likely you are to support out government and its war machine.
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Unless it's maintained it won't be of much use. It needs to be kept up to date with tax laws, and it relies entirely on the IRS accepting the generated returns. It seems it may function for now, though.
Direct File interprets the United States' Internal Revenue Code (26 USC) as plain language questions, the answers to which should be known to taxpayers without need of external instructions or publications. Taxpayers' answers are then translated into standard tax forms and transmitted to the IRS's Modernized e-File (MeF) API, which is available for authorized public use
The code to generate the forms should be simple enough.... But the amounts, the deductions, the laws, the rules...etc, these all need to be checked by an accountant or lawyer.... It might be a good method to double check a return, but if the return isn't guaranteed to be correct by the IRS or an accountant is checking details...I would be worried
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The GitHub page has a section for this:
Exempted Code
Not all source code, documentation and metadata used in the development of Direct File is included in this repository. Specifically, any code or data that is considered Personally Identifiable Information (PII), Federal Tax Information (FTI), Sensitive But Unclassified (SBU), or source code developed for National Security Systems (NSS), as defined in 40 U.S.C. § 11103, is exempt. Due to these restrictions, certain pieces of functionality have been removed or rewritten.
But does it build?!
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Direct File interprets the United States' Internal Revenue Code (26 USC) as plain language questions, the answers to which should be known to taxpayers without need of external instructions or publications. Taxpayers' answers are then translated into standard tax forms and transmitted to the IRS's Modernized e-File (MeF) API, which is available for authorized public use
So before the API it still generates everything you need to mail in the forms?
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The code to generate the forms should be simple enough.... But the amounts, the deductions, the laws, the rules...etc, these all need to be checked by an accountant or lawyer.... It might be a good method to double check a return, but if the return isn't guaranteed to be correct by the IRS or an accountant is checking details...I would be worried
Right. Well it should be good for 2025, so it depends on how much/if any changes there are in the next year.
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So before the API it still generates everything you need to mail in the forms?
Probably. It would need to be updated with new laws and rules though.
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Pervasive Surveillance of People is Being Used to Access, Monetise, Coerce, and Control: Computer Vision Research Feeds Surveillance Tech as Patent Links Spike 5×
Technology1
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YouTube's new ad strategy is bound to upset users: YouTube Peak Points utilise Gemini to identify moments where users will be most engaged, so advertisers can place ads at the point.
Technology1
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