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NY Newsday recommends Online Gaming Regulation
Posted by: yorktown (Moderator)
Date: August 29, 2007 09:38PM

New York Newsday (Long Island)
Newsday Article Here

Reprinted courtesy of New York Newsday

Editorial: Time to regulate Internet gambling
August 29, 2007


Antigua and Barbuda, a tiny twin-island nation of 80,000 people in the Caribbean, is the mouse that roared on Internet gambling. It could force the elephantine United States to reconsider laws prohibiting online wagering with offshore casinos.

Antigua challenged that prohibition before the World Trade Organization and won - twice. Congress should accept that reality and replace the ban with regulation designed to ensure the financial integrity of gaming in cyberspace, to screen out minors and to make sure that the United States gets its cut in taxes. Legislation introduced by Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.) provides a good jumping-off point for debate in Congress.

Antigua is home to 32 online casino operations. It initiated a trade complaint in 2003, claiming that the U.S. ban violates its rights as a member of the global free trade community policed by the WTO. It won in 2004; again in 2005, after the United States appealed; and the ruling was reaffirmed yet again this year. All that's left is for the WTO to decide what damages to impose.

The organization's credibility is on the line. It can't risk the rap that it aggressively enforces trade rules against small nations but timidly allows the world's economic powerhouse to skate. The integrity of the United States is also at issue. This country can't respect trade rules that benefit us and ignore those that don't without undermining valuable free trade agreements.

Washington may be left with only two choices: Allow Americans to wager online with offshore casinos or ban all Internet gambling - including popular pastimes like fantasy sports leagues and off-track betting on horses, and maybe even the sale of lottery tickets online. Antigua argued that by permitting some online wagering while making it illegal for financial institutions to handle payments for Internet casinos abroad, the United States impermissibly discriminates against cyber-casinos. Washington should respect the WTO ruling, permit Internet casino gambling and do all it can to protect American consumers.


Re: NY Newsday recommends Online Gaming Regulation
Posted by: yorktown (Moderator)
Date: August 29, 2007 09:59PM

My 2 cents here:

1 cent: Online Gaming's biggest allies may become Microsoft, Sony, Dow, Dupont, and other large multi-nationals with copyrights and patents. A WTO penalty would allow Antigua to produce duplicate US goods and sell them worldwide.

2 cents: With Monday's resignation of US Attorney General Gonzales, cracks in the ironclad wall of the Bush administration are now opening. Bush has to hire a moderate. Hopefully it will be someone like Christopher Cox, who doesn't believe in the 'thought police.'

Add these two together and I believe you should get the following result:

The administration will not admit defeat and repeal the UIGEA act, but they will:
-Back down from the issue in such a way that it makes it clear to us the US is giving up its pursuit of online gambling.

This will open the doors for the industry again. It will be ALOT sooner than people predicted. They had predicted 3-5 years. I say in 2008 the doors will open up again.

After that, the only threat would be the 7 US states that ban online gambling.

Webmaster
StartCasino.com



Edited 1 times. Last edit at 08/29/07 10:00PM by yorktown.

Re: NY Newsday recommends Online Gaming Regulation
Posted by: Mcluhan (---.ppp.ucc-net.ca)
Date: August 31, 2007 11:58AM

Adding some general comments to this:

1. It seems the 11-state ban is the industry-wide norm

Illinois
Indiana
Louisiana *
Michigan
Nevada
New Jersey
New York
Oregon
South Dakota
Washington *
Wisconsin

* felony for real money internet gambling/play

if counting seven as the states banning online gaming, which 4 states would you exclude?

2. On Player risk, as regards the Wire Act, there is an untested theoretical line drawn between sports betting and poker. 'experts' take position the poker player is not at any great risk because of the likelihood (none) of an AG prosecuting a constituent over playing RM poker on his home PC. So 'player risk' minimized to a non-issue

3. The main force and effect of the UIGEA Act to the industry is the encumbrance to ecomm processing. The US pmt gateway situation is the real issue, a business-life threatening issue. There is a virtual collapse of (US gateway) payment systems, to call it anything else is a misnomer.

once the legislation is released the bank sector will need to develop policy, and they will. This will take a long time to go away. Its going to get worse before it gets better.



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