×
Privacy Features:
- No Sign-Up Needed - You can talk to Deducto-Man without giving your name or making an account, just like talking to a friend without having to introduce yourself first.
- Your Computer Does the Work - Most of the magic happens right on your computer, not on someone else's big computers far away.
- No Memory Bank - Deducto-Man doesn't keep a big book of everything you've ever talked about. Once you close the window, he forgets your conversation.
- No Spy Cookies - The website doesn't use special cookies that watch what you do on other websites, like having a friend who doesn't follow you around the playground.
- Take Your Talk Home - You can save your conversation like taking a picture, so you can keep it just for yourself.
- No Personal Questions - Deducto-Man never asks for things like your address, phone number, or other private information.
- Fresh Start Button - The "New Chat" button lets you start over completely, like erasing a chalkboard.
- Simple Design - The app is simple and only does what it needs to do, not collecting extra stuff about you.
- Private Questions - Your tax questions stay between you and Deducto-Man, like when you whisper a secret to just one friend.
- No Sharing With Others - Your information isn't sent to other companies or websites without you knowing.
- Works Without Internet History - You can use Deducto-Man even if you ask your browser not to remember websites you visit.
- No Hidden Secrets - All the code works in a way you can see - nothing happens behind a secret curtain.
Documents Currently Trained On
Core IRS Forms and Schedules
- Form 1040: The main U.S. individual income tax return
- Schedule C: Profit or Loss from Business (sole proprietors/freelancers)
- Schedule SE: Self-Employment Tax
- Schedule 1, 2, 3: Additional income and adjustments, credits, and taxes
- Form 1065: Partnership Return of Income
- Form 1120/1120S: Corporate returns for C-corps and S-corps
- Schedule A: Itemized Deductions
- Form 8889: Health Savings Accounts (HSAs)
- Form 4562: Depreciation and Amortization (including Section 179)
IRS Publications
- Publication 17: Your Federal Income Tax
- Publication 334: Tax Guide for Small Business
- Publication 535: Business Expenses
- Publication 463: Travel, Gift, and Car Expenses
- Publication 946: How to Depreciate Property
- Publication 929: Tax Rules for Children and Dependents
- Publication 501: Dependents, Standard Deduction, and Filing Information
- Publication 502/503: Medical Expenses; Child and Dependent Care Expenses
- Publication 970: Education Tax Benefits
- Publication 969: HSA and Other Tax-Favored Health Plans
- Publication 561: Determining the Value of Donated Property
IRS Notices, Revenue Procedures & Relevant Acts
- Revenue Procedures (Rev. Proc.) such as 2023-23 (inflation adjustments for 2024)
- Notices (for implementing new law, special rules, or guidance from IRS)
- Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) (still affects many provisions through 2024)
- CARES, SECURE, and American Rescue Plan Acts (where relevant provisions persist or phase out in 2024)
General Rules and Best Practices
- Tax bracket tables and inflation-adjusted thresholds for 2024
- Mileage rates for 2024 from IRS announcements
- Key credit and deduction phase-outs (Child Tax Credit, Earned Income Credit)
- Rules for Section 179 and bonus depreciation
- Standard deduction amounts
- SALT deduction cap updates
- Retirement account contribution limits (IRAs, 401(k)s, HSAs)
- Home office deduction rules and safe harbor method
Limitations:
I don't have access to every single IRS form instruction, all possible publication editions, or pre-public-release tax law (top-secret superhero restraint!).
My knowledge is based on the main IRS documents, official updates, and widely applicable 2024 rules—plus common best practices and interpretations.
For "deep cut" or hyper-niche situations, I always recommend double-checking with actual IRS docs or a tax professional.