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Inzichten, analyses en updates uit de AI-agenteconomie. Bladeren op tag.
GitHub Sponsors, Patreon, and Open Collective: A Tax Guide for Open Source Maintainers
GitHub Sponsors issues a 1099-NEC above $600, Patreon's 1099-K only triggers past the OBBBA-restored $20,000/200-transaction threshold, and Open Collective's fiscal host absorbs the paperwork entirely — a platform-by-platform breakdown of sponsorship tax reporting and the hobby-vs-business test that determines self-employment tax.
On-Demand 3D Printing Service Bookkeeping: True Costs, Failure Rates, and Depreciation
Filament is only 20-30% of what a 3D print actually costs - machine depreciation, a 2-25% failure rate, and labor make up the rest, and Section 179 combined with 100% bonus depreciation under the OBBBA can let a print-for-hire shop deduct a new printer's full cost in the year it's purchased.
Obsolete Inventory Write-Downs: GAAP's Lower of Cost or Net Realizable Value Rule Explained
GAAP requires inventory to be reported at the lower of cost or net realizable value under ASC 330; here's how to identify obsolete and slow-moving stock, calculate the write-down, and record it while satisfying the IRS's stricter subnormal-goods test under Treasury Regulation §1.471-2(c).
The Fiduciary Duties Every Nonprofit Board Member Must Know
Nonprofit directors carry three legal fiduciary duties — care, loyalty, and obedience — and courts have held boards personally liable for failing to ask basic questions about how the organization spent its money.
Menu Engineering 101: Stars, Plowhorses, Puzzles, and Dogs
Menu engineering classifies every dish by two numbers — contribution margin (menu price minus food cost) and popularity (sales mix) — into four quadrants, Stars, Plowhorses, Puzzles, and Dogs, revealing that a high-volume 32% food-cost burger can generate far more total profit than a "leaner" 38% food-cost entree that rarely sells.
Lease vs. Buy Equipment in 2026: Section 179, Bonus Depreciation, and Total Cost of Ownership
With 100% bonus depreciation permanently restored for equipment placed in service after January 19, 2025 and a $2,560,000 Section 179 cap for 2026, the lease-vs-buy decision now hinges on total cost of ownership, cash flow timing, and how long you'll actually keep the equipment — not just which option gets the bigger write-off.
Key Person Insurance: Why Losing One Employee Could Sink Your Small Business
Key person insurance is a policy a business owns on a critical employee, paying the company 5 to 10 times that person's annual compensation if they die or become disabled, and premiums are not tax-deductible under IRC Section 264(a)(1) unless Section 101(j) notice-and-consent is completed before the policy is issued.
IRS FIRE System Shutdown: What 1099 and W-2 Filers Need to Know About IRIS
The IRS retires the FIRE e-filing system on December 31, 2026, requiring all 1099 and W-2 filers to switch to IRIS for tax year 2026 returns, and a new Transmitter Control Code alone can take 45 or more days to approve.
Involuntary Churn: A Guide to Recovering Failed SaaS Payments
Involuntary churn accounts for 20-40% of total subscription churn and drains roughly 9% of MRR industry-wide, but smart retries, dunning emails, and card account updaters can recover 60-80% of it if failed charges are booked as AR, not lost revenue.
Interchange vs. Markup: What's Actually Negotiable in Credit Card Processing Fees
Credit card processing is three stacked fees — interchange, network assessments, and processor markup — but only the markup is negotiable, and on $30,000 in monthly volume the gap between flat-rate and a well-negotiated interchange-plus deal can run $200-$400 a month.
Bookkeeping for Private Music Teachers: Deferred Revenue, Home Studios, and Quarterly Taxes
Independent music teachers who collect payment directly from students run a Schedule C business subject to 15.3% self-employment tax, must book prepaid lesson packages as deferred revenue rather than income, and face a new $2,000 1099-NEC threshold starting in 2026.
How to File for Your IEEPA Tariff Refund Through CBP's CAPE Portal
CBP's CAPE portal lets importers of record file for IEEPA tariff refunds on entries filed between February 2025 and February 2026, with Phase 1 covering roughly 63% of affected entries and refunds targeted within 45 to 90 days plus accrued interest.