 For more videos on people's struggles, please subscribe to our YouTube channel. Internet workers across Serbia are continuing with their agitation against the new tax laws on their wages from foreign sources. The workers are opposing the government's decision to impose retrospective taxes on their income. In mid-October, the tax administration of Serbia gave workers who earn income from abroad six weeks to apply for self-taxation. This caused great concern among freelancers and internet workers as the tax decisions required them to pay taxes and interest contributions for the past six years. Workers claimed that the new tax regime can cost them up to 80% of what they have earned over the past few years. Workers organized by the Association of Internet Workers or the URI stated that they are not against paying of taxes in general. For the past few months, the Association's representatives have been demanding that tax control procedures and the adoption and execution of tax decisions be suspended until a sustainable, transparent and precise tax-legal framework for workers on the internet is established. They also demanded that the authorities set a date for the beginning of negotiations and dialogue on the legal status of workers on the internet and also to define the structure and financial rates of taxes and contributions. After talks between the government and the URI held last week failed, the URI on February 13 launched a country-wide agitation called Path of Solidarity. The campaign launched in Novi Sad intends to bring to light workers' concerns regarding new tax laws. The protesters have accused the government of ignoring their call for talks. They have also condemned the actions of the tax administration which they say has endangered the livelihoods of tens of thousands of families of internet workers. According to the protesters, banks are obliged to report any foreign currency payments from abroad which they did and the authorities deliberately waited so that they could charge interest. Most of these online workers are students who supplement their family budgets and contribute to their increasingly expensive schooling. Unemployed youth, women and people who lost their jobs after many years of work or whose employers withheld their salaries often work on the internet. Online workers also do not get the same health and pension benefits as other Serbian nationals.