“l’d like to thank all of you for coming, and we’ll see you next?year.”–Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos at the company’s annual meeting at the Seattle Art Museum, a meeting hijacked by protestors who called out the online retailer for its labor and tax practices.
“This is not something that can continue to get pushed out,” Ives said. “It’s important that it starts sooner rather than later.”
“What we found is that their growth in revenue and growth in office space are very closely correlated, and is so close you know it’s been very well planned and executed,” he said. “This isn’t some dot-com that’s land-banking for a pie-in-the sky business model, but rather a company that’s been publicly traded for 18 years that is just trying to keep pace with the 0 billion of revenue that they have that’s growing at over 20 percent per year.”
“We regularly analyze environmental and social impacts of our businesses and assess how we can positively contribute to and manage impacts on the many communities in which we operate across the United States and the world,” the statement reads.
“What we’ve observed is that there’s a type of game that exists in the middle of that spectrum that basically indexes very high on creativity (and) hand-craftsmanship,” he said Monday?at the GamesBeat conference in San Francisco.
“We will cooperate fully with the European Commission and continue working hard to support businesses of all sizes and help them grow,” an Amazon spokesperson said.
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“We got hand warmers, gloves and earmuffs,” he added. “We are from Florida, so we had to be ready.”
“We do not have any meaningful data right now that would generate concern, but our latest forecast indicated another strong year from China. LA Tourism is continuing to invest more marketing resources in the China market than any other international country to ensure Los Angeles remains a premier destination for Chinese travelers. We will continue to monitor this issue very closely.”
“We could have built a suburban campus,” Bezos?said at the company’s recent shareholder meeting, noting that a location outside of the city might have saved the company money. “I think it would have been the wrong decision.”
“We appreciate Mayor Durkan’s efforts to significantly modify the Council’s ill-conceived proposal to tax jobs in Seattle,” said Downtown Seattle Association CEO Jon Scholes in a statement, after Durkan introduced her original compromise last week. “A tax on jobs at any level is bad economic policy and will negatively impact Seattle’s economy and city tax revenues.”