
Given the global success of Where The Hell is Matt?, it’s surprising we haven’t seen more travel companies fighting with each other to strike a deal with its creator, Matt Harding

Given the global success of Where The Hell is Matt?, it’s surprising we haven’t seen more travel companies fighting with each other to strike a deal with its creator, Matt Harding
MarketWatch reports that major online travel agencies, plus ASTA and the U.S. Tour Operators Association, filed a lawsuit against New York City over its new law that holds intermediaries responsible for the tax on the retail rate when they sell hotel rooms using the merchant model.
This marks the first time that tour operators have taken sides in the OTAs’ national battle with cities and counties about the hotel tax issue.
The law, which went into effect in September 2009, says “room remarketers” are responsible for the full rent, meaning they would remit tax on the net rate to the hotels, as OTAs customarily do, and then pay tax on the remaining rent, including service fees, directly to the NYC tax commissioner.

Banish how it used to be carried out – travel inspiration and searching for products has changed immeasurably as consumers find new ways of finding the perfect trip.

Do you understand the true costs of travel payments, how to reduce your exposure to credit card fraud and surcharges or how virtual cards work?

Discussing recent hot topics such as the TripAdvisor-Jetsetter acquisition, hotel wifi, Wordpress and hotels, mobile design and user experience.

Ancillary services are here to stay, so how do travel companies and airlines develop their technology and relationships so that merchandising can work for everyone?
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