Let's use Switzerland as an example.
I think there are a few reasons why Switzerland doesn't request taxes from me or Steve:
- We're too small for Switzerland to know we exist
- Even if they did, the cumulative transaction volume is likely to be close to $0, so there's not much to tax
- We don't have offices, employees, or other assets in Switzerland (the locus/nexus thing I mentioned)
- Knowing that we don't have assets in Switzerland, they'd likely need to argue all of this in a US court. Good luck with that.
As you can imagine, having employees in a country changes a lot.
Take my state example. One of the questions they asked was whether our employee was involved in the research, development, production, or sale of any of our products. For us, the answer was no.
But
Disney has offices in Zurich, Switzerland. So it's reasonable for the Swiss to ask if any of those employees were involved in the research, development, production, or sale of anything that the guest was buying.
Even if Disney thought the answer was obviously no, the Swiss could reasonably ask to see all of the research papers to which the locals contributed. And then they'd ask to see documentation about how that research was used to produce products, software, and IP for the company.
If any of that ended up in something that generated revenue, the Swiss could reasonably argue that the Swiss economy contributed to that income, so taxes were due.
As I said, even if the outcome is that Disney ends up owing nothing, the amount of risk mitigation it would take to
ensure Disney owes nothing probably costs more than they'd make in revenue from the sale of LL.
ETA: I don't know for sure that
@wdwmagic owns no assets in Switzerland. There's always the chance he's converting this site's profits into Toblerone bars stashed in Credit Suisse vaults all over Geneva.