1721 points by danso 2252 days ago | 448 comments on HN
| Moderate positive Editorial · v3.7· 2026-02-28 11:31:38 0
Summary Economic Justice & Information Transparency Advocates
ProPublica reports on IRS reforms to the Free File tax filing program, reforms prompted by the outlet's investigative reporting exposing TurboTax's deceptive practices. The regulatory changes strengthen consumer protection through mandatory search engine visibility, standardized naming conventions, and lifting a decades-old prohibition on the IRS creating its own filing system. The article demonstrates investigative journalism's role in enabling policy reform that expands economic access and information transparency for lower- and middle-income Americans.
> a years-old prohibition on the IRS creating its own online filing system has been scrapped
What kind of insanity leads to this? The government is prohibited from creating software that helps its citizens?
There's a lot wrong with Brazil but here I just download the government-provided software (that runs on Windows/Linux/Mac) and fill my taxes in 10-15 minutes. Every year they release a new version that is easier to use than the previous one.
>Now companies are barred from hiding their free products from search engines such as Google, and a years-old prohibition on the IRS creating its own online filing system has been scrapped.
>Under the new rules, participating companies also have to standardize the naming convention of their Free File version as “IRS Free File program delivered by [product name].”
Respect to ProPublica for their commitment to this issue. I first learned of the Free File deal from their reporting and enjoyed the HN comments on their articles.
Now let's have the IRS start building out their free e-file program and IDEALLY put some pressure or at least summarize what parts of the tax code are the most complex so they can be simplified.
A lot of the tax code complexity comes from congress messing with the logic of taxing folks on their income.
And yes, simplifying the tax code would get rid of loopholes like deduction that can exceed the cost of the item placed into service (!) which make zero sense AND create tax vs gaap difference that have to be tracked over long periods of time.
Another one to get rid of - phantom LIFO inventory unless the inventory is real.
There is no reason the IRS shouldn't have a simple, online fillable 1099EZ that makes the calculations and validations for you. And while their at it, match the SSN to the w2 info that they have on file. This would take care of 80% of the population.
Just don't outsource it. I'm sure USDS could have it ready in less than a year.
Essentially:
* IRS wanted to open tax software business to private companies.
* Intuit has a variety of products with similar names and each has a free offering for a specific set of tax payers (e.g. income below some number). IRS + US Gov bought the story.
* Intuit caught doing a variety of false advertising, misleading documentation, adversarial website editing, etc. They make it impossibly hard to find which is the free version of whatever you need.
So this is a big first step away from the draconian Intuit monopoly. It would be interesting to know what precipitated this change.
They should implement something for the simple cases first. Like the standard deductions, no investment income, no business income scenario. That will probably handle 40% of the filers with one page of input.
Wow I would love to hear the inside story on this one.
I think we're all motivated by both survival and doing good, and I see an overall trend towards more doing good, as survival gets easier. Is this a case of that? Who drove it? What internal processes allowed public service to overcome corrupt lobbying pressure?
This USA tax thing has always baffled me... it is the exact definition of why we pay taxes: for the government to provide services that are common to the country´s citizens.
There´s nothing more common than tax collection: rich, middle class or poor. Why wouldn't citizens demand a public tax filing process? Even in Mexico we have an automagical tax filing process that makes:
a) The great majority of the population who perceives a salary not needing to file taxes.
b) For the rest of the people, those who don't do anything fancy, just click one button in a portal to do the filing, and everything is calculated by the tax authority.
c) For the small percentage that do more complex things (I'll say it is between 5% and 10% of the population) still can do it in the portal for free, or hire an accountant.
From the article: The addendum also expressly bars the companies from “engaging in any practice” that would exclude their Free File offerings “from an organic internet search.”
Note the term "organic" which suggests the page "naturally" ranks in the first few hits. The agreement doesn't seem to prevent Intuit and others from both buying ads to populate the top of search results and SEO'ing the crap out of it to make their stuff rank at the top "organically."
I see this as a good example of how policy makers write policy with good intentions but without a fundamental understanding of how gamed Internet search is in order to make it profitable.
It's so insane to me that Grover Norquist somehow lobbied against free tax filing provided by the IRS. It escapes all logic that he didn't pay attention to what other countries do. It escapes all logic that he didn't think for a moment about what the cost would be to citizens in (more or less direct payments to Intuit) and that's not considering the incalculable cost of just gathering up all this documentation and put it into TurboTax.
Billions of dollars in lost man power? Billions of dollars in wealth transfers from middle and lower class people? Probably more like Trillions.
Norquist didn't succeed in drowning the government in the bathtub. He DID successfully manage to keep the entire US citizenry drowning in billions of hours of wasted effort and billions of dollars of unnecessary expenditures. Good work, Norquist!
My pet peeve: I've used freefillableforms or whatever it is called for several years. It's the only (free, online) option (I think) for someone in my income bracket. It's not a bad system, but it is deliberately hobbled: it will do about 90% of the math for you, and about 90% of the "put this computed value on line N of some other form".
But ... not the remaining 10%. And there will be no errors if you fail to do them (other than your return being incorrect).
I don't know if it is better or worse to offer a deliberately crippled system.
Excellent news, and congrats to Propublica for in no small part making it happen.
This wasn't just a shady operation -- Turbotax openly lied to customers about its free file program, it deliberately suppressed the program from search results, it lied to veterans. It was 100% acting in bad faith during negotiations with the IRS.
Sometimes topics like this end up becoming kind of ideological or partisan; but in this case I feel like Intuit is just very objectively in the wrong, and that the IRS agreement for the free file program very objectively just was not working. I myself contacted Turbotax about their free edition and got personally lied to about the differences between the programs.[0]
> In this call, I was told that the form availability between the Free File and Free edition were the same, and I wouldn't be eligible for either. To check this, I created a second account and added the same forms to the Free File program. I was never charged or told that I was ineligible. All of the forms were added successfully.
The idea was lots of people could file for free using a private online service. Not many people at all ended up using it, since it wasn't in the company's interest to have people not pay them.
> Those efforts have been fueled by hefty lobbying spending and campaign contributions by the industry. Intuit and H&R Block last year poured a combined $6.6 million into lobbying related to the IRS filing deal and other issues. Neal, who became Ways and Means chair this year after Democrats took control of the House, received $16,000 in contributions from Intuit and H&R Block in the last two election cycles.
The IRS is perhaps the one government agency that just does not fuck around. It's always sensible to make sure that filing for taxes is as smooth as possible, at least for those who wish to abide by the rules. Follow the money.
We have a huge constituency that believes that government taxes are the very worst thing to happen in human history, so anything that makes filing taxes easier gets heavy push back in order to support their “taxes are so hard and burdensome” narrative.
I think they get it mostly right for tax filing. But I find them to usually be pretty blinded by ideology when it comes to some topics and severely lacking in objectivity.
100% agree. To me they seem to be playing this perverse game of knowing how much you owe based on your W-2s then not telling you, waiting for you to file and guess how much you owe just right. If you guess wrong tough luck, you get penalties years later.
Do you have a reference for the deduction greater than basis loophole? I spent a few minutes looking for it on google and couldn’t find a reference. It does seem non-sensical on the face, but I’d like to read more.
An actual argument I've heard from TurboTax shills is that tons of people underpay taxes now with the self report system, and having the government pre-fill forms for you to rubber stamp would effectively increase taxes on the working class.
The recent movement seems to be heavily precipitated by the discovery that Intuit was hiding its Free File pages (apparently first found by this Redditor [0]), with the stories sparking investigations at the federal and state level.
> ...put some pressure or at least summarize what parts of the tax code are the most complex so they can be simplified.
Trump's tax plan did simplify things for the majority of W-2 workers on salary that used to itemize because they owned a mortgage. Now, most of them can file using the standard deduction.
I don't have a mortgage but have sometimes itemized depending on moving and work expenses, various deductions, etc. Those are now gone, and my taxes are easier as I don't even bother keeping receipts and saving charitable gifts throughout the year. I come out a head, too, since the standard deduction was almost doubled.
Add in 1099s, and it would probably cover 99% of the population.
I'm happy to pay my taxes. I'm very much NOT happy to collect all of my information and carry it to my accountant. And then be afraid that I forgot something.
In fact, if its the accountant's lobbying against this, I'd be happy to pay $400 (what I pay for tax prep) into an accountant retirement fund or something, just don't make me collect all the information that the IRS already has.
Yeah there's no reason that in 2019 we should even have to file. Everything should be automated for 85% of the population and they just receive the bill. Only a small percent would actually need to file due to certain circumstances mostly by people that are using special business structures to minimize taxes.
Americans on the whole don't trust their government quite a lot. If the government just said "you owe X in tax this year", nearly everyone's knee jerk reaction would be that the government is overestimating and cheating them.
On the other hand, you can pay a flat fee to let a third party fight the government on your behalf. That's something that many Americans like the sound of.
I think the real problem is that the tax system is complicated, and turbo tax does a good job of making it feel even more complicated than it is. You can fill out your own 1040EZ, if you even know what that is, but people have this sense that the tax system is full of loopholes and they want to exploit that.
ProPublica reported that after they published this story, people eligible for free filing contacted TurboTax to get refunds. At first, they were able to get refunds of the fees that they paid but once word got out the customer service reps stonewalled them. So ProPublica invited readers to submit stories of their experiences with TurboTax customer service.
> I see this as a good example of how policy makers write policy with good intentions but without a fundamental understanding [...]
I agree with your argument in the general case, but in this case that seems like what they would want: not to exclude the possibility of advertising or SEO for the other products, but to rule out doing reverse SEO (or just robots.txt to exclude it from search engines) on the Free File pages.
In Australia you can do it all online. Took me about 60 seconds this year and $0. Admittedly I had nothing to claim or declare beyond PAYE and the auto-filled dividends.
Assuming you're a traditional W2 worker, yes. But many people have other income sources such that the IRS doesn't know how much you owe until you report it.
Most countries have this "automagical tax filing process". And what kills me the most is that America actually secretly has this same system too. Yet every year we have to go through the charade of filing taxes ourselves, when the governemnt already knows what we owe without us needing to round up paperwork, W2 forms, 1099 forms, and so forth. Yet they make us do it anyway.
Don't believe me? Simply don't file your taxes next year. You will get a letter from the IRS sent to you that literally tells you what you owe. They know all of your income down to the cent, they know what you owe. This automagical system exists. Yet the only way to "use" it is to either not pay your taxes, or to pay them wrong.
Yet every year, the IRS makes us go through the charade of putting our taxes together and all the work (and money) that it entails, when the whole time they know what we owe already and expects us to pay that unless we can prove them otherwise.
It's by design. The GOP wants you to rub your face in the fact that the government runs on tax revenue, in the hope that you'll develop an allergy to taxes.
They pretty much have what you want through the free fillable online forms. Everything is digital, you simply enter the numbers from your documents and calculations are made for you. It does not do any SSN verification though.
It is not insane, just not obvious what Grover’s aim is. He is anti-tax for a large number of reasons. By making paying tax painful for the majority of people he is trying to increase the percentage of the population that hate the IRS and taxes. All very sane if your aim is to lower taxes.
a) The great majority of the population who perceives a salary not needing to file taxes.
In the United States, and many other nations, the vast majority of taxes aren't collected from payroll. If that was the case, things would be easy. But there are hundreds of other ways that taxes are collected, and they vary from person to person.
More importantly, taxes aren't exclusively about revenue generation. They're used to encourage people to do or not do things: Save money, invest money, buy houses, have babies, buy cars, add solar panels, and thousands of other things.
There are plenty of people who shout "flat tax!" whenever this topic comes up. But they're mostly people who have only led simple lives where the IRS only touches them on their paycheck, or who don't understand the full range of how taxes are used.
+1 to Adam Ruins Everything! Other commenters might scare you away, but it brings attention to a lot of things that go unnoticed by the general public. Of course, always check sources yourself, but there are some genuinely interesting things brought to your attention that you might have never thought about.
Exactly. This made sense decades ago when it would have been extremely costly to keep track of all the data necessary to calculate taxes.
I don't want the government to make a free solution to help me file taxes. I want the government to make a solution that prevents me from having to file taxes in the first place!
Article explicitly demonstrates investigative journalism freedom enabling policy reform. Core UDHR right—freedom to report on abuses of power. A search visibility reform directly addresses information access (non-deceptive disclosure).
FW Ratio: 57%
Observable Facts
The article's lead states: 'The changes come after ProPublica's reporting this year on how the industry...has long misled taxpayers,' explicitly attributing regulatory change to investigative journalism.
A core IRS reform bars companies from 'engaging in any practice' that excludes Free File offerings 'from an organic internet search'—directly mandating transparent information access.
The page includes a republish notice: 'Creative Commons License (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0)' and states 'You are free to republish it so long as you...' credit ProPublica and link to the original.
A call-to-action for sources states: 'Reach Justin by email at [email protected] or via Signal at 774-826-6240. Here's how to send tips and documents to ProPublica securely.'
Inferences
The article exemplifies how investigative freedom (Article 19) directly enables policy reform protecting other rights—freedom to report abuses led to consumer protection.
The search visibility mandate represents regulatory enforcement of information transparency, a structural manifestation of Article 19.
ProPublica's republish policy and whistleblower contact infrastructure structurally embed commitment to information freedom.
Article strongly advocates for expanded access to tax refunds and free filing, framing these as essential to adequate living standards for lower- and middle-income families.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The article explicitly names the policy target: 'Finding free online tax filing should be easier this year for millions of Americans' and references 'lower- and middle-income Americans.'
Tax refunds directly impact household income adequacy; the article notes the IRS 'hopes the changes will make the free option more accessible for taxpayers in the 2020 filing season.'
Inferences
Tax refunds are a direct component of adequate living standards; preventing fraud ensures citizens receive their full economic due.
The regulatory changes aim to universalize access to financial benefits, supporting Article 25's right to adequate standard of living.
Article advocates for expanded access to a public social security benefit (free tax filing). Explicitly targets 'lower- and middle-income Americans' and frames ensuring access as a social welfare achievement.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The article states the Free File program provides 'free versions of tax filing software available to lower- and middle-income Americans.'
IRS Commissioner Rettig is quoted: 'The improved process will make Free File stronger and give taxpayers another reason to consider this valuable software option.'
Inferences
Free tax filing access is framed as a form of economic security—a public benefit reducing financial burden on vulnerable populations.
The advocacy for expanded access explicitly supports Article 22's right to social security and protection.
Article identifies how deceptive practices disproportionately harmed lower- and middle-income Americans, framing this as discriminatory treatment.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The article notes the Free File program was designed to serve 'lower- and middle-income Americans.'
ProPublica reported that Intuit and H&R Block 'hid' free filing pages from search engines, diverting users to paid products—a practice specifically targeting eligible but unsuspecting taxpayers.
Inferences
The targeting of low-income taxpayers constitutes discrimination based on economic status.
The regulatory response prohibiting such practices is framed as correcting discriminatory market conduct.
Article documents investigative reporting enabling regulatory remedies for deception, and notes that Intuit faces ongoing lawsuits—mechanisms for victims to seek remedy.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The article states: 'The changes come after ProPublica's reporting this year on how the industry...has long misled taxpayers.'
The article notes: 'Intuit faces multiple ongoing lawsuits and investigations into whether the company deceived customers.'
Inferences
ProPublica's investigative reporting enabled victims of deception to understand their harm and pursue legal remedies.
Regulatory action provides a systemic remedy for past wrongs in the tax filing marketplace.
Article addresses protection from fraud in economic transactions and ensures taxpayers receive their full financial due (refunds)—aspects of the right to property.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The article exposes practices that diverted customers away from 'tax prep they could have gotten for free,' depriving them of rightfully owed refunds.
The regulatory fix ensures transparent access to fair tax filing, protecting economic transactions.
Article demonstrates both ProPublica and IRS acting out of duty to community—investigating abuses and implementing reforms in the public interest.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
ProPublica explicitly states its mission: 'nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power' and highlights the series 'The TurboTax Trap' as accountability work.
The IRS is reported as acting in 'taxpayers'' interest through the regulatory changes: 'The improved process will make Free File stronger.'
Inferences
Both ProPublica and the IRS are portrayed as fulfilling duties to the community through investigation and reform aligned with public interest.
The article exemplifies institutional accountability and community-oriented governance.
Article reports regulatory changes that expand and protect consumer rights—preventing future erosion or destruction of taxpayers' rights to fair treatment and information.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The regulatory reforms add explicit protections: 'barred from hiding their free products from search engines' and 'standardize the naming convention.'
The changes prevent companies from 'engaging in any practice' that would exclude free offerings, blocking future deception.
Inferences
The reforms prevent future destruction or erosion of taxpayers' rights to transparent, honest information.
Explicit regulatory guardrails protect against future recurrence of deceptive practices.
Article frames U.S. tax reform as alignment with international best practices, positioning regulatory change within a global norm of just social order.
FW Ratio: 33%
Observable Facts
The article states: 'Many developed countries have such systems, allowing most citizens to file their taxes for free,' comparing U.S. reform to international norms.
Inferences
The regulatory change moves U.S. tax administration toward more just international norms of government accountability and public service.
The comparison frames reform as part of a global order that prioritizes citizen welfare and transparent public administration.
Article reports on democratic policy process (regulatory change) resulting from public pressure and media investigation, enabling informed participation in tax policy discourse.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The article documents that IRS regulation changes came 'after ProPublica's reporting,' showing investigative journalism shaping public policy.
The article links readers to prior ProPublica reporting for deeper context, enabling informed participation in policy debate.
Inferences
The reporting enables informed public participation in ongoing democratic debates about tax system fairness and consumer protection.
By documenting how public-interest journalism influences regulation, the article demonstrates participatory accountability.
Article addresses consumer education about tax filing rights through standardized naming and transparency requirements.
FW Ratio: 33%
Observable Facts
The article notes: 'Under the new rules, participating companies also have to standardize the naming convention of their Free File version' to reduce taxpayer confusion.
Inferences
Clear naming and transparent information reduce confusion, providing a form of consumer education about available rights and services.
Transparency enables informed decision-making—a dimension of the right to education.
Article briefly mentions Intuit's denial ('The company has said such accusations are baseless') but this balanced reporting is subordinate to accountability framing.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The article includes Intuit's statement: 'The company has said such accusations are baseless.'
Inferences
The mention of Intuit's denial reflects fair reporting practice but is not the article's primary focus.
No privacy policy or data handling disclosure visible in page content provided.
Terms of Service
—
No terms of service visible in page content provided.
Identity & Mission
Mission
+0.25
Preamble Article 19 Article 20
Mission statement explicitly identifies as 'independent, non-profit newsroom that produces investigative journalism in the public interest,' directly supporting free expression and accountability.
Editorial Code
—
No explicit editorial guidelines or code of ethics visible in page content.
Ownership
+0.20
Article 19 Article 25
Identified as non-profit, independent organization, which structurally supports editorial independence and freedom from commercial bias.
Access & Distribution
Access Model
+0.10
Article 19 Article 26
Landing page with no apparent paywall or subscription requirement supports open access to information.
Ad/Tracking
—
No tracking pixels or ad integration visible in provided page content.
Accessibility
+0.15
Article 2 Article 26
Page implements responsive design and semantic HTML structure, supporting multiple screen sizes and accessibility standards, suggesting commitment to universal access.
ProPublica structurally supports Article 19 through: open access (no paywall), republish under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0) enabling information sharing, whistleblower contact process, and mission statement 'independent, non-profit newsroom that produces investigative journalism in the public interest.'
build 1ad9551+j7zs · deployed 2026-03-02 09:09 UTC · evaluated 2026-03-02 13:57:54 UTC
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