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I'm applying for the iPhone developer program, and it mentioned they may need business documents, possibly including a seller's permit. I have all of the other documents in order, but I was looking on CalGOLD and it says "All businesses selling or leasing tangible property must obtain a Seller's Permit."

Does software count as tangible property if it is only distributed online?

Ref: http://www.calgold.ca.gov/Results1.asp?TYPE=7371&CNTY=37&CITY=350 (under state filings)

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No idea why people are voting to close. Totally valid question IMO. – Andrew Grant Feb 23 at 0:55
Just as you wouldn't generally ask a lawyer about programming advice, asking a bunch of programmers about legal advice isn't necessarily a good idea. – Greg Hewgill Feb 23 at 1:00
@Andrew: Too localized? – Zach Scrivena Feb 23 at 1:05

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In this case no.

Apple is the actual seller and pays you commission on those sales (your 70%). You will though have to declare and pay tax on this amount every year.

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Software apps aren't "tangible property" so based on that I would say this rule doesn't apply. (Disclaimer: I'm from Europe.)

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