From the SFGate.com:
 
Back in the dial-up days of the Internet,  the remarkable new technology seemed certain to change our lives - if  only it could grasp a fragile hold on the marketplace. Convinced that  they were working for the greater good, politicians of all stripes agreed  to maintain the Internet as a "tax-free" space, enabling consumers  to grow accustomed to communicating, researching and shopping online.
 
As an editorial board, we championed  this approach for many years. "The current moratorium on Internet  taxes is justified," we wrote in 1999. "It gives the fledgling  e-commerce industry a chance to develop and encourage innovation on  the Internet."
Times have changed.
 
Ten years later, it's no longer possible  for us to argue that anything about the Internet is fledgling. The technology  has changed the way we learn, make friends - even find spouses. E-commerce,  once a tiny segment of the American retail landscape, has done so well  that it's ravaged long-standing brick-and-mortar business models.
 
It's also ravaged government tax coffers.  In 2007, California alone lost about $1.2 billion in state and local  taxes to customers using the Internet to make purchases from out-of-state  retailers. Though taxpayers are legally bound to pay sales tax on these  purchases, the reality is that no one reports it, and the state has  no way to collect.
The economic downturn, combined with  a genuine concern for struggling local retailers, has politicians all  over the country taking a new look at taxing Internet purchases. We  agree that the time has come.
There's no more rationale for out-of-state  retailers to get a tax subsidy that our own local retailers aren't getting.
 
The ideal solution would be for Congress  to institute a federal law allowing states to force out-of-state retailers  to collect sales tax. Unfortunately, the efforts seem to be stalled  at the federal level - that's where Internet industry and anti-tax advocates  have been able to most effectively block legislation.
 
Their arguments are thin. They claim  it would be too complicated. Sure, it wouldn't be easy. There are 50  states, and each of them has different laws about which items can be  taxed and for how much. But so far, 36 states have signed on to the  Streamlined Sales Tax Project, which would unify tax rules and definitions  across state lines. Once all 50 states sign on, it would be fairly easy  for some enterprising software designer to create a program for e-commerce  retailers. And all 50 states are likely to sign on quickly if they know  that federal legislation is pending.
Increasingly, though, penniless state  legislatures are seeking to force Congress' hand. New York was the first  state to require out-of-state online companies to collect sales tax  on purchases sent to New York addresses - provided that the companies  had at least one in-state agent or affiliate. The results of that law  have been mixed: Many out-of-state online companies simply dumped their  affiliate programs and continued avoiding taxes. But New York has collected  more than $70 million in less than two years. And so far, the federal  courts have upheld the statute.
Emboldened by New York's semi-success,  Assemblywoman Nancy Skinner, D-Berkeley, has authored AB178, which would  do the same thing in California. AB178 wouldn't be the full answer to  California's sales tax collection problems. Like New York, we'd see  some businesses simply dumping their affiliate programs, and they might  choose to take the state to court. Both plans are inelegant solutions  to a problem that must be dealt with at the federal level. But state  legislators should still pass AB178, if for no other reason than it  would push Congress to tackle the problem head-on.
 
"I do think, frankly, that if (AB178)  were to pass, Congress would have to take some action on this,"  said Lenny Goldberg, executive director of the California Tax Reform  Association. "Between California and New York, you'd see the discussion  taking hold. AB178 would speed up the process."
 
