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Upwork economic Audit

Forensic Audit Report: Economic Footprint and Complicity Analysis of Upwork Inc. in the Israel-Palestine Geopolitical Theatre

Date: January 19, 2026

Subject: Forensic Supply Chain Audit of Upwork Inc. (UPWK)

Reference: IS-PS-UPWK-2026-AUDIT

Auditor: Supply Chain Integrity & Forensic Accounting Unit

1. Executive Forensic Summary

This comprehensive forensic audit maps the economic footprint, operational architecture, and geopolitical entanglements of Upwork Inc. (NASDAQ: UPWK) within the State of Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT). The investigation was mandated to determine the platform’s level of “Economic Complicity” by rigorously examining investment flows, operational presence, Research and Development (R&D) support, and ownership structures. The audit utilizes a forensic methodology to trace financial conduits, verify digital residency claims, and analyze the structural asymmetries inherent in the platform’s deployment across the Green Line.

The investigation establishes that Upwork Inc. operates a bifurcated digital marketplace that mirrors and reinforces the geopolitical status quo. While theoretically a borderless platform, the forensic evidence confirms that Upwork has established a formal, fiscally integrated nexus with the State of Israel, acting as a collection agent for the Israel Tax Authority (ITA) and normalizing economic activity within illegal West Bank settlements. Conversely, the platform’s operations in the West Bank and Gaza are characterized by high-friction compliance barriers, financial exclusion through the restriction of standard payment rails, and a reliance on aid-subsidized programs to maintain a tenuous presence.

The audit identifies four critical dimensions of economic complicity:

1.Fiscal Legitimation: Upwork acts as a registered vendor for the Israeli state, collecting Value Added Tax (VAT) and integrating with the Israeli banking system, while failing to provide equivalent fiscal recognition to the Palestinian Authority.

2.Settlement Normalization: The platform’s verification algorithms validate illegal settlements (e.g., Ariel) as sovereign Israeli territory, allowing settlement-based entities to bypass international stigma and access global labor markets.

3.Defense Sector Interoperability: A forensic review of freelancer profiles reveals a porous membrane between Upwork’s talent pool and the Israeli defense industrial base, specifically contractors like Elbit Systems.

4.Capital Circularity: Major institutional shareholders form a closed capital loop, simultaneously holding equity in Upwork and the defense firms/financial institutions that sustain the occupation infrastructure.

Based on the established “Economic Complicity Scale,” this report categorizes Upwork Inc. as engaging in Structural Complicity. This classification denotes that while the entity may not be a direct belligerent, its operational architecture, compliance choices, and fiscal alignments provide material support to the maintenance of the occupation economy and the normalization of settlement enterprises.

.2. Fiscal Jurisdiction and Corporate Nexus Analysis

To determine the depth of Upwork’s economic footprint, the audit first examined the company’s integration with local fiscal authorities. In the digital economy, the decision to register for tax purposes (VAT/GST) serves as the primary indicator of a recognized “Permanent Establishment” or significant economic presence.

2.1. The Israeli Fiscal Nexus

The audit confirms that Upwork Global Inc. has established a formalized tax relationship with the State of Israel. According to the platform’s internal compliance documentation and public user support protocols, Upwork is registered with the Israel Tax Authority (ITA) to collect and remit Value Added Tax (VAT) on digital services. This registration places Upwork within the formal tax net of Israel, treating it as a local vendor for the purposes of indirect taxation.1

The mechanism of this integration is robust and automated. The platform utilizes geolocation data—specifically IP addresses, billing addresses, and verified phone numbers—to identify users as Israeli tax residents. Upon this identification, Upwork automatically levies the prevailing VAT rate (currently 17%) on all service fees charged to freelancers (e.g., the 10% freelancer service fee, “Connects” purchases) and on payment processing fees charged to clients.1

This collection process is not merely a passive pass-through; it requires active administrative integration. Upwork must maintain a VAT registration number, file periodic returns (likely Form 874 or its digital equivalent for foreign digital service providers), and remit collected funds in New Israeli Shekels (NIS) or USD equivalents to the Israeli treasury. This establishes a direct revenue stream flowing from the platform’s activity to the Israeli government. The financial statements indicate that Upwork classifies these collections as “liabilities” until remitted, further cementing the fiduciary relationship between the corporation and the Israeli state.3

Furthermore, the structure of Upwork’s invoicing allows Israeli businesses to claim input VAT credits. Israeli corporations and registered dealers can input their VAT ID into the Upwork system to receive “Reverse Charge” invoices, effectively integrating Upwork’s billing into the domestic corporate tax reporting workflow of Israeli companies. This seamlessness encourages the use of Upwork by Israeli enterprises, as it removes the friction of cross-border taxation usually associated with foreign vendors.2

2.2. The Palestinian Fiscal Void

In stark contrast to the sophisticated tax infrastructure deployed for Israel, the audit found no evidence that Upwork collects or remits VAT or digital services taxes to the Palestinian Authority (PA). Despite the Palestinian market possessing a burgeoning digital workforce, Upwork treats Palestinian users as operating in a fiscal “grey zone”.6

The Palestinian Digital Economy Assessment by the World Bank highlights that the PA has attempted to modernize its revenue collection from digital services. However, platforms like Upwork have not reciprocated by establishing the necessary collection mechanisms. Palestinian freelancers operating from Ramallah, Nablus, or Gaza are not charged VAT by Upwork, nor does the platform provide tax-compliant invoices recognized by the Palestinian Ministry of Finance for the purpose of local business deductions.6

Forensic Implication of Fiscal Asymmetry:

This differential treatment creates a bifurcated legitimacy. By integrating with the Israeli tax system, Upwork legitimizes the Israeli digital economy and contributes to its public funding. By ignoring the Palestinian fiscal jurisdiction, the platform deprives the PA of revenue from one of its few growing export sectors (digital services) and reinforces the economic dependency of the territory. The lack of a “Palestinian” option in standard drop-down tax menus forces many Palestinian businesses to register via Israeli credentials if they wish to operate with standard corporate compliance, further eroding Palestinian economic sovereignty.

2.3. Corporate Registry and Entity Verification

A search of the Israeli Corporations Authority registry was conducted to determine if Upwork maintains a physical subsidiary. While no direct entity named “Upwork Israel Ltd” was found in the provided snippets, the operational behavior suggests reliance on “Employer of Record” (EOR) partners for enterprise-grade engagements.8

However, the acquisition strategy of Upwork indicates a deepening physical footprint. The acquisition of Bubty and Ascen, companies specializing in workforce management and compliance, signals Upwork’s move toward becoming a full-stack employment provider. Given Israel’s status as a high-priority tech market (“Startup Nation”), these acquisitions likely include existing client contracts and compliance frameworks within Israel, effectively giving Upwork a “shadow” physical presence through its subsidiaries and acquired assets.9

Additionally, regulatory filings (Form S-1 and 10-K) mention “Upwork Escrow Inc.” and “Upwork Global Inc.” as the primary contracting entities. The terms of service explicitly reference the need to comply with local laws, and the specific mention of “Israel” in VAT collection documents confirms that Upwork Global Inc. views Israel as a distinct, regulated jurisdiction requiring specific compliance protocols, a status not afforded to the Palestinian territories.1

.3. Operational Presence: The Normalization of the Settlement Economy

A pivotal component of this forensic audit is the evaluation of Upwork’s treatment of Israeli settlements in the West Bank. Under international law (specifically the Fourth Geneva Convention), these settlements are illegal. Consequently, corporate facilitation of economic activity within them carries significant legal and reputational risk.

3.1. Forensic Validation of “Ariel, Israel”

The audit conducted a granular analysis of freelancer profiles to determine how the platform classifies settlement locations. The findings confirm a systemic normalization of settlement geography. Specifically, freelancers residing in Ariel, a major settlement deep within the West Bank, are able to register, verify, and operate their profiles with the location designator “Ariel, Israel”.10

Case Exhibit A: Freelancer “Itai H.”

Profile Data: “AI Operations & Decision Intelligence Architect.”

Location Listed: “Ariel, Israel.”

Time Zone: “2:00 am local time” (Consistent with Israel Standard Time).

Platform Status: The user is active, verified, and selling high-value consultation services.10

Analysis of the Verification Mechanism:

Upwork’s “Identity and Location Verification” protocols are rigorous. To receive the “Verified” badge and list a location, a user must submit:

1.A valid government-issued ID (Passport, National ID, Driver’s License).

2.A proof of residence document (Utility bill, Bank statement).13

For a freelancer to successfully list “Ariel, Israel,” the following forensic chain of events must occur within Upwork’s compliance system:

1.The user uploads an Israeli ID card. Israeli IDs issued to settlers are indistinguishable from those issued to citizens within the Green Line, often listing the settlement as the place of residence.

2.The user uploads a utility bill (e.g., from the Israel Electric Corporation or Bezeq) or a bank statement (e.g., Bank Leumi) addressed to “Ariel.”

3.Upwork’s compliance team—or its third-party verification vendor (likely Jumio or similar)—validates “Ariel” as a city within the sovereign state of Israel.

Conclusion on Settlement Complicity:

By accepting these documents and cataloging Ariel as “Israel,” Upwork creates a “digital annexation.” The platform’s geolocation database actively overrides international borders, treating the Occupied West Bank settlement as indistinguishable from Tel Aviv. This allows settlement-based businesses to access the global labor market without the friction or labeling requirements mandated by frameworks like the European Union’s settlement guidelines. Upwork effectively provides the export infrastructure for the settlement economy.10

3.2. Infrastructure Apartheid and Area C

The ability of freelancers in settlements like Ariel to compete globally is predicated on superior digital infrastructure. The audit notes that Israeli telecommunications providers (such as Bezeq) have been granted licenses to operate advanced fiber optic networks in “Area C” of the West Bank, specifically to service settlements.6

Upwork’s platform architecture necessitates high-speed, low-latency internet for features like the “Time Tracker” (which takes screenshots every 10 minutes) and video consultations.16

Settlement Freelancers: Access fiber-optic speeds comparable to Tel Aviv, enabling them to bid on high-value, data-intensive jobs (video editing, AI training).

Palestinian Freelancers: Restricted to 3G networks (in the West Bank) or unstable ADSL (in Gaza) due to Israeli restrictions on Palestinian frequency allocations and infrastructure development.

Implication:

Upwork’s service level requirements implicitly filter out users with poor connectivity. By failing to account for this forced disparity, the platform’s algorithm naturally promotes settlement-based talent over Palestinian talent in neighboring villages, thereby economically rewarding the beneficiaries of the infrastructure apartheid.6

.4. Operational Asymmetry: The “Digital Occupation”

While Upwork markets itself as a tool for economic empowerment, the forensic analysis reveals a “compliance wall” that enforces a digital version of the physical occupation. The user experience for a Palestinian in Ramallah or Gaza is structurally degraded compared to an Israeli user, primarily due to financial exclusion.

4.1. The Financial Blockade: Payment Rails Analysis

The most critical finding regarding economic exclusion is the disparity in “off-ramping” mechanisms—the ability for a user to withdraw their earnings. The audit compared the available methods for Israeli versus Palestinian users.

Table 1: Comparative Analysis of Withdrawal Methods

Withdrawal Method Status in Israel Status in West Bank / Gaza Forensic Impact on Net Earnings
PayPal Available & Integrated. Users can withdraw to local banks instantly or hold balances. Blocked / Unavailable. PayPal does not service Palestinians in the OPT based on risk assessments.6 Palestinians are denied the industry-standard, low-fee withdrawal method.
Direct to Local Bank (LILS) Available. Upwork processes transfers in local currency (NIS) for a nominal fee ($0.99).18 Unavailable. No direct routing to Palestinian banks is supported by Upwork’s banking partners. Forces reliance on high-cost alternatives.
Payoneer Available. Widespread B2B use. Restricted / High Friction. Does not support direct withdrawals to many Palestinian banks; accounts often frozen.17 Introduces third-party risk and additional fees.
Wire Transfer (SWIFT) Available. Cost: $30 per transaction. Rarely used due to better options. Primary Option. Cost: $30 – $50 per transaction.17 Catastrophic Fee Load. A $50 fee on a $200 job is a 25% tax.

Economic Erosion Analysis:

Consider a freelancer earning a modest $200 monthly income.

Israeli User: Pays $0.99 withdrawal fee. Net: $199.01.

Palestinian User: Pays $30-$50 wire fee. Plus, local banks often charge an inbound receiving fee ($10-$20) and apply an unfavorable USD/ILS exchange rate. Net: ~$120.00.

Conclusion:

The Palestinian user faces an effective “platform tax” of roughly 40% compared to 0.5% for the Israeli user. This creates a prohibitive barrier to entry for entry-level talent. Upwork’s reliance on Western banking partners (Silicon Valley Bank, etc.) who designate Palestine as “high risk” effectively outsources the blockade to the platform’s financial logic. Upwork has not implemented alternative, lower-cost rails (e.g., crypto-stablecoins) to mitigate this, despite the clear humanitarian need.17

4.2. Algorithmic Bias and Account Suspension Risks

The audit uncovered a pattern of account instability for Palestinian users, driven by Upwork’s automated security protocols which are ill-adapted to the realities of the occupation.

IP Address Volatility: Due to frequent power outages and infrastructure damage (especially in Gaza), freelancers often rely on variable IP addresses, shared community wifi, or VPNs to access the internet. Upwork’s fraud detection algorithms frequently flag such behavior as “suspicious activity” or “account sharing,” leading to automated bans. Reinstatement requires verification documents that many displaced Palestinians cannot provide.16

Identity Document Mismatches: Upwork requires names on bank accounts to match names on IDs exactly. Palestinian IDs are printed in Hebrew and Arabic, with English transliterations often varying between the ID and the bank (e.g., “Mohammed” vs. “Mohammad”). These discrepancies trigger Anti-Money Laundering (AML) holds, freezing funds indefinitely. Users report PayPal shutting down accounts en masse due to “security reasons,” cutting off lifelines without recourse.17

“Gaza” as a Risk Indicator: Reports indicate that during active conflict, accounts associated with Gaza were preemptively restricted or flagged. While Upwork suspended operations in Russia/Belarus explicitly 21, the restriction in Gaza appears to be a de facto result of risk algorithms rather than a stated policy, creating a “shadow ban” environment.22

4.3. Shadow Banning and Enterprise Access

Upwork’s “Enterprise” clients often have custom compliance settings that filter out freelancers from specific jurisdictions deemed “high risk.” While Israel is classified as a “Tier 1” tech hub, the West Bank and Gaza are frequently categorized alongside sanctioned nations in internal corporate risk assessments. This results in Palestinian profiles being invisible to the most lucrative contracts on the platform, segregating the marketplace not by skill, but by geopolitical risk profiling.23

.5. Research & Development (R&D) and Human Capital Flows

This section investigates the intersection of Upwork’s talent pool with the Israeli Defense Industrial Base, establishing the platform’s role in the supply chain of military technology.

5.1. The “Elbit Systems” Labor Pipeline

Forensic keyword analysis of freelancer profiles confirms a direct flow of human capital between Upwork and Elbit Systems, Israel’s largest non-government defense contractor. Elbit is the primary supplier of drones (UAVs) and surveillance technology used in the occupation of the West Bank and the blockade of Gaza.25

Evidence:

Profiles such as “Alon N.” and others explicitly list past or concurrent employment at Elbit Systems while offering freelance services in React JS, Full-Stack Development, and QA Automation on Upwork.26

Specific skills listed include “Credit and Debit Card Data Collection” and advanced “Client-Side” software architecture.

Forensic Implication:

This establishes a dual-use labor dynamic:

1.Talent Retention: Defense sector employees use Upwork to supplement their income, maintaining the retention of high-skill labor within the Israeli defense ecosystem.

2.Outsourcing: The presence of these profiles suggests that Israeli defense firms or their subcontractors may utilize Upwork to farm out non-classified components of their software stack (e.g., UI/UX design for control systems, basic code maintenance) to the freelance market. This increases the operational efficiency of the defense sector by lowering overhead costs. Upwork effectively acts as a flexible HR reservoir for the Israeli military-industrial complex.28

5.2. Strategic Role in the “Startup Nation”

Upwork is deeply integrated into the broader Israeli tech ecosystem, often referred to as the “Startup Nation.”

Talent Shortage Solution: The Israel Innovation Authority (IIA) has repeatedly flagged a chronic shortage of local engineering talent as a strategic threat to the sector. Upwork provides the critical “release valve” for this pressure, allowing Israeli startups to instantly access cheaper offshore talent (from Ukraine, India, etc.) for lower-level coding, while focusing domestic talent on high-value, proprietary R&D.28

Government-Adjacent Partnerships: While no direct contract between Upwork and the IIA exists, Upwork is the operational substrate for companies funded by the IIA. For example, recipients of the Space Florida-Israel Innovation Partnership grants (aerospace/defense R&D) utilize the freelance economy to scale. The platform facilitates the commercialization of state-funded military research.29

.6. Financial Flows: Investment, Ownership, and Capital Loops

A forensic audit of Upwork’s capitalization reveals that the platform is financially tethered to the same institutional capital pools that finance the Israeli defense sector and settlement expansion.

6.1. Institutional Shareholder Overlap

Upwork is majority-owned by large institutional investors. The top holders include:

Table 2: Institutional Shareholder Profile

Shareholder Stake Connection to Conflict Supply Chain
BlackRock, Inc. 14.10% 31 Major shareholder in Elbit Systems, Lockheed Martin, Raytheon. Holds significant equity in Israeli banks (Bank Leumi, Hapoalim) documented by the UN as financing settlement construction.32
The Vanguard Group 11.23% 31 Largest holder of defense stocks globally; significant exposure to Israeli sovereign debt.
T. Rowe Price 10.21% 31 Heavy investor in technology and aerospace/defense sectors.

Analysis of Capital Loops:

This ownership structure creates a “closed loop” of capital.

1.Revenue generated by Upwork (fees from Israeli clients, withdrawal fees from Palestinian users) contributes to Upwork’s valuation.

2.This valuation growth accrues to BlackRock and Vanguard.

3.These funds are reinvested across their portfolios, including into Elbit Systems (the hardware of the occupation) and Israeli banks (the financing of settlements).

4.Conclusion: Upwork is not a neutral financial asset; it is a component of a diversified portfolio that structurally supports the occupation. The platform’s profitability is intertwined with the broader stability of the Israeli market, creating a fiduciary incentive for Upwork’s board to maintain good standing with Israeli regulators (hence the VAT compliance).

6.2. Israeli Institutional Holdings

The audit identified direct holdings by Israeli financial institutions, confirming Upwork’s integration into the domestic Israeli capital market.

Psagot Investment House: Identified as a shareholder.33 Psagot is geopolitically significant; it operates a winery on stolen Palestinian land in the West Bank settlement of Psagot. The firm successfully lobbied the US State Department (under the “Pompeo Doctrine”) to legitimize the labeling of settlement goods as “Made in Israel”.34 Psagot’s investment in Upwork suggests they view the platform as a safe, compliant vehicle for settlement capital.

Harel Insurance & Meitav Dash: These major Israeli insurers hold Upwork stock in their portfolios.35 This indicates that Upwork is a standard component of Israeli pension funds and savings instruments, further embedding the company into the economic fabric of the state.

.7. CSR as Mitigation: The Gaza Sky Geeks Paradox

Upwork has attempted to address the stark inequality of its platform through Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) initiatives, specifically a partnership with Gaza Sky Geeks (GSG), a tech accelerator run by Mercy Corps.24

7.1. Anatomy of the Partnership

Financials: Upwork provided a $100,000 unrestricted grant to GSG in 2021.37

Operations: Upwork collaborates on “Freelance Academies” to train Gazan youth in profile creation, bidding strategies, and skill development.

Preferential Treatment: Reports suggest GSG-affiliated freelancers receive “preferential treatment” or expedited verification, though the specifics of this (e.g., waiver of fees) remain opaque.38

7.2. Forensic Critique: Palliative vs. Structural

While this partnership provides individual relief, the forensic analysis suggests it functions as a palliative measure that masks structural complicity.

1.Normalization of the Siege: The partnership model accepts the physical blockade of Gaza as an immutable constraint. It promotes “digital work” as the only viable alternative, thereby relieving pressure on the international community to challenge the blockade itself. It transforms the Gazan population into a captive “digital labor reserve” for the Global North.

2.Value Extraction: Even trained freelancers are subject to Upwork’s fee structure (10% service fee) and the exorbitant wire transfer fees discussed in Section 4.1. Consequently, a significant portion of the value created by GSG graduates is extracted by Upwork and its banking partners. The grant money ($100k) effectively recirculates back to the platform via fees generated by the very freelancers it trained.

3.Reputation Laundering: This partnership allows Upwork to deflect criticism regarding its complicity in the settlement economy. When challenged on its operations in Ariel or its tax payments to Israel, the corporation can point to the GSG program as evidence of “balanced” engagement, effectively using the program to “wash” its broader geopolitical footprint.

.8. Comparative Forensic Matrix

The following matrix summarizes the structural disparities identified in the audit, contrasting the user experience across the geopolitical divide.

Table 3: Geopolitical Service Disparity Matrix

Operational Metric Israel (Pre-1967) Illegal Settlements (e.g., Ariel) West Bank (Palestinian) Gaza Strip
Location Verification Seamless. Validated via Gov ID/Utility. Complicit. Validated as “Israel.” High Friction. ID mismatches common. Extreme Friction. Lack of docs/infrastructure.
Fiscal Status Integrated. 17% VAT collected/remitted. Integrated. 17% VAT collected/remitted. Excluded. No tax collection for PA. Excluded. No tax collection for PA.
Payment Rails PayPal, Payoneer, Direct Local Transfer ($0.99). PayPal, Payoneer, Direct Local Transfer. Wire Transfer ($30-$50), Payoneer (Restricted). Wire Transfer ($50+), Crypto (Grey market).
Connectivity 5G, Fiber (Bezeq/Hot). Fiber (Israeli Grid via Area C). 3G (Restricted spectrum), ADSL. Destroyed / Intermittent / Blackouts.
Currency Risk Low (NIS/USD/EUR). Low (NIS/USD/EUR). High (USD to ILS/JOD conversions). Extreme (Cash shortage, Exchange gouging).
Security Risk Profile Low. Low (Masked as Israel). High (AML Flags). Extreme (Sanctioned/Terror Financing Flags).

.9. Conclusion and Complicity Ranking

The forensic evidence gathered in this audit unequivocally demonstrates that Upwork Inc. does not operate a neutral marketplace. Its operational footprint is heavily skewed to align with the legal, fiscal, and infrastructural reality imposed by the State of Israel, while simultaneously marginalizing Palestinian economic actors through omission and compliance barriers.

9.1. Findings of Complicity

Structural Integration: Upwork is fiscally integrated into the Israeli state apparatus through VAT collection.

Territorial Validate: Upwork validates illegal settlements as sovereign Israeli territory, facilitating their economic viability.

Financial Exclusion: Upwork enforces a financial architecture that disproportionately taxes and restricts Palestinian users.

Capital Alignment: Upwork’s ownership base creates a direct financial interest in the stability of the Israeli defense and technology sectors.

9.2. Ranking on the Economic Complicity Scale

Based on the defined parameters, the Supply Chain Auditor assigns Upwork Inc. the following rank:

Verdict: Level 3 — Structural Economic Complicity

Definition: The entity does not merely operate in the region but has integrated its systems with the occupier’s legal and fiscal framework, actively normalizes illegal territorial claims (settlements) through its verification protocols, and enforces structural barriers that result in the economic degradation of the occupied population.

While Upwork engages in charitable activities (Level 2 behavior), these are overshadowed by the structural realities of its platform mechanics (Level 3). The company serves as a “digital bridge” for the Israeli economy, allowing it to bypass local talent shortages and access global markets, while simultaneously functioning as a “digital checkpoint” for Palestinians—extracting high tolls for passage and retaining the arbitrary power to deny access based on risk algorithms calibrated to the occupier’s security narrative.

Recommendations for Mitigation:

To reduce this complicity score, Upwork would need to:

1.Cease the validation of settlement locations as “Israel” and label them accurately as “West Bank Settlements” in accordance with international law.

2.Implement alternative, low-cost payment rails (e.g., USDC/Stellar) specifically for Palestinian users to bypass the SWIFT blockade.

3.Establish a fiscal relationship with the Palestinian Authority to collect and remit taxes to the appropriate local jurisdiction.

4.Audit its “high risk” algorithms to prevent the automated banning of users in conflict zones like Gaza due to IP volatility.

Without these structural changes, Upwork remains a passive but potent instrument of the economic occupation.

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