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Momentum Gathers for First Ever ‘International Minimum Standards’

eCOGRA teams with other leading industry bodies in new Code of Conduct on responsible gaming

Following its introduction at the European Interactive Gaming Expo in October, the International Responsible Gambling Code of Conduct continues to gather pace as it receives support from key industry bodies such as the European Gaming and Betting Association (EGBA), eCOGRA and the Interactive Gaming Council (IGC) who have contributed to the Code’s development.

http://www.ecogra.org/newsletter/05.html


Some Bets Are Off

The strangely selective and self-defeating crackdown on Internet gambling.  

By Jacob Sullum
Reason.com

On July 16, 2006, the CEO of BetOnSports.com attacked an anti–online gambling bill that the House of Representatives had overwhelmingly approved a few days before. “We want to be regulated,” David Carruthers wrote in the Baltimore Sun. “We want to be taxed. We want to be licensed. Instead of dealing with us constructively to address issues of mutual concern, these legislators prefer to pretend that they can control the Internet. Instead of protecting the public, they would rather waste time on public posturing to their partisan base.”

http://reason.com/news/show/126022.html


The many faces of legislations concerning online gambling 
by Arthur Crowson
PokerListings.com

May 19, 2008 - The gambling laws in Europe are often quite complex. First, there is each country’s legislation, which might say one thing; and then there is the EU legislation, which might contradict the individual country’s law.

The legislations regarding gambling online in the Netherlands, for instance, are now up for discussions. The Dutch government claims online gambling is illegal while EU has given the Netherlands a final warning before it issues court action over their gaming restrictions.

http://www.pokerlistings.com/dutch-seek-help-to-fight-illegal-online-gambling-26905


Time to Fold 
Wall Street Journal Europe
April 10, 2008

A trans-Atlantic spat over online gambling may help rewrite the rules of the game for Internet commerce across borders. For a change, the Europeans stand on the side of free trade, while America dabbles in regulatory overreach.

The European Union last month launched an internal probe into whether the U.S. Justice Department selectively enforces its antigambling laws against European online firms that offer wagers on sports events. Brussels is making a narrow legal point that Washington discriminates against Europeans by simultaneously permitting U.S. Internet horse betting. That's against World Trade Organization rules, and the case may end up there.

The U.S. last year lost a similar WTO online gambling case against Antigua and Barbuda. The island nation argued that U.S. online gambling rules violated Washington's GATT commitments to open its market in "recreational, cultural and sporting services." The U.S. countered that its policies were justified to protect public morals and public order, a legitimate exception under WTO rules. But the WTO panel ruled that America wasn't applying its restrictions equally to foreigners and domestic operators. U.S. online horse-betting sites aren't banned.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120779121832703691.html




Where the votes are
Americans treasure freedom; the party that gets serious about giving us liberty will win the future

Los Angeles Times - March 20, 2008
By Nick Gillespie and Matt Welch


Key highlights: Legalize online gambling. At least since the mid-1970s, betting has been something Americans love to do. A 2006 poll found that 78% of Americans believe the government should not "restrict what adults do on the Internet in the privacy of their own homes." Yet the feds are waging an unwinnable war on online gambling -- even incurring a World Trade Organization sanction for jailing the head of a legal, Britain-based operation when he changed planes in Dallas.

Make the Internet tax moratorium permanent. Speaking of online freedom, the Internet Tax Fairness Act of 1998 banned state and local governments from levying sales and access taxes in cyberspace. That was back in the days before the Net economy -- and telecommuting and various other adjunct activities -- had become a mass phenomenon. Every few years, the moratorium comes up for renewal. The party of the future -- even the party of today -- will be the first one to make the ban permanent.


Read the full article here http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-welch20mar20,0,1852254.story 


The National Council on Problem Gambling and the Online Poker Industry  

Pocketfives Feb 21, 2008 - The organization finds itself, like the online poker industry, stuck in a grey area with the passage of the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act and development of the bill’s enforcement regulations. PocketFives.com sat down with Whyte to get his take on recent industry developments.

http://www.pocketfives.com/07B8D1CF-4997-4E23-8662-9215635C0BE1.aspx



Antigua seeks WTO arbitration in U.S. gambling dispute  

GENEVA (Reuters) January 31, 2008 - Antigua has asked the World Trade Organization (WTO) to arbitrate in a dispute over gambling with the United States, its lawyer in the case said on Thursday.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080131/wr_nm/trade_wto_gambling_dc_1


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