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The Almighty Buck The Internet Government United States Technology

US Now Says All Online Gambling Illegal, Not Just Sports Bets (bloomberg.com) 162

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Bloomberg: The U.S. Justice Department's decision that all internet gambling is illegal will cast a pall on the industry as businesses and state lotteries evaluate the implications of the change and the government's plans to enforce it. The U.S. now says federal law bars all internet gambling, reversing its position from 2011 that only sports betting is prohibited under a law passed 50 years earlier. Although the federal law specifically prohibits transmission of wagers and related information across state lines, the Justice Department's new interpretation will impact all online gambling because as a practical matter it's difficult to guarantee that no payments are routed through other states, said Aaron Swerdlow, an attorney with Glaser Weil Fink Howard Avchen & Shapiro LLP in Los Angeles.

The reversal was prompted by the department's criminal division, which prosecutes illegal gambling. The opinion issued about seven years ago that the 1961 Wire Act only banned sports gambling was a misinterpretation of the statute, according to a 23-page opinion by the department's Office of Legal Counsel dated Nov. 2 and made public Monday. The new reading of the law probably will be tested in the courts as judges may entertain challenges to the government's view of the law's scope, the Justice Department said. It may also affect states that began selling lottery tickets online after the 2011 opinion, as well as casinos that offer online gambling.
In contrast, the Supreme Court last May "cleared the way [...] for states to legalize sports betting, striking down a 1992 federal law that had prohibited most states from authorizing sports betting."
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US Now Says All Online Gambling Illegal, Not Just Sports Bets

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  • by Thunderstruck ( 210399 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @06:52PM (#57969116)

    The article does not explain why it would be difficult as a practical matter to ensure that payments do not get routed through other states. Can anyone clarify what they mean by this? What exactly would need to be done, and how difficult would it be?

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Total control over the US CC system.
      Every use of the credit card has to be legal.
      Should a US website be created and then attract users in the USA, then the US gov can "find" that same site too.
      Block the easy way to move money on the internet, track all the US sites.
      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        They can also be extremely mean, as in get the all the losers money back, less a recovery fee and block the business from claiming any future debts. Make the bets not count over statute of limits durations ie seven years, if you lost money to an internet gaming site, they can go back, get that money back and give some of it back to you, less recovery costs. Blame the dicks at Electronic Arts, getting children to gamble to scam them of their pocket money, seriously, oh yeah, they will be coming for you next,

    • by Richard_at_work ( 517087 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @08:05PM (#57969548)

      I'm wondering at how wide the US is going to start casting its net on this - VISA, MasterCard not allowed to facilitate online betting anywhere in the world because they are US companies and online betting is illegal under US law?

      If you think that's reaching, I suggest reading up on the case of the Danish man buying Cuban cigars from a German seller - the US confiscated the payment as it used the SWIFT network, and Cuba is under a US embargo...

      • by Anonymous Coward

        This is a good example of what happens when Congress fails to keep up with the times and pass appropriate legislation. Online gambling has been with us for years and yet the only federal law we have to go off of predates the internet and home computers by decades. They have had ample time to pass a law that clarifies this but haven't done so. Its not just gambling either but with computing in general and other industries Congress's inability to stay with the times has lead to similar issues where regulatory

    • by gl4ss ( 559668 )

      whats probably more important is that you're not betting against other people in other states.

    • SWIFT (the network that actually does inter-bank transfers) crosses state lines. So unless your bank's processing center and the destination bank's processing center happen to be in the same state, the transaction will cross state lines.

      Also, credit card purchases are not actually processed in your state (unless you're in SD or DE). Even then the money from the credit card company will probably cross state lines when it is sent to the seller's bank.

      Finally, your bank may contract out payment processing of

  • by Anonymous Coward

    If this law applies to loot box gambling, there will be a very large market with many customers that no longer welcomes unscrupulous games.

  • Stocks (Score:5, Insightful)

    by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @06:55PM (#57969138)

    So investing in the stock market, or anything for that matter, is illegal?

    Investing in anything has a risk/probabilistic component. Therefore it is a form of gambling. Well isnâ(TM)t it?

    And donâ(TM)t retort with BS that playing blackjack online is 100% luck based .. it isnâ(TM)t. I mean, let me know randomly how clicking âoehit meâ for everything works out. All gambling takes some amount of skill to improve your odds.

    • Re:Stocks (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Mark of the North ( 19760 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @07:28PM (#57969342)

      You might see similarity between the stock market and gambling, but does the same similarity exist between your savings account and gambling?

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Not as long as my balance is under $100,000.

    • Re:Stocks (Score:5, Funny)

      by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @07:30PM (#57969358)

      The stock market is like the old joke about poker.

      Q: Is poker a game of luck and chances?
      A: Not the way we play it.

      • Lets provide proper citation here.

        It is from the 1935 film "Mississippi"

        The character is Commodore Jackson, played by none-other-than W.C. Fields, who over his acting career played many characters that were "gamblers", which I put in quotes because in the films, the games were always crooked, and he was in on it.
    • Re: Stocks (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Stocks, trading, and investing are essentially a form of legalized gambling. Not sure why OP is rated as a troll, it's a fully legitimate point.

      Sure, it has its own set of nomenclature but it's throwing money at something with probability that money will either grow or shrink, like all gambling.

      One may argue that it contributes back to society, the again, so do winners in traditional gambling scenarios who push their money back into the economy.

      The real difference I see is that stocks allow for creating ris

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Absolutely correct!!! Ding! Ding!
        Stocks are an excluded (from anti-gambling laws) form of gambling.
        If stocks we never considered gambling, there would be no need for a law
        to legalize their use as an investment
        (that is, make their use an exclusion).

        Really, people are you that gullible?

        CAP === 'dispels'

        • It's not a matter of gullibility so much as people confusing "what the law declares" with "what is". Although my personal experience is that both types of folly tend to occur in the same people. Probably stems from a lack of critical thinking.
    • Re:Stocks (Score:5, Insightful)

      by alvinrod ( 889928 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @08:11PM (#57969574)
      Don't forget insurance. That's just another form of gambling as well when it comes down to it. Of course the government has no problem with they or their friends who can make sizable campaign contributions engaging in the kinds of behavior that that the common man cannot.

      Trying to make it illegal is stupid, since it won't stop people. It just drives everything underground and gives criminals another profitable enterprise in which they can engage.
      • Re:Stocks (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @11:51PM (#57970404)
        There is actually a statistical difference between all of these.
        • Stocks are (over time) positive sum. The total value of all stocks goes up over time, meaning on average stock investors are winners. So trading and investing in stocks is good for the economy.
        • Same goes for savings accounts. They're positive sum. You make money (interest), the bank makes money (dividends from investing your savings). So it's good for the economy.
        • Insurance is zero sum (negative sum if you subtract the cut taken by the insurance company). But the "winners" in insurance are people who suffer an pre-agreed loss. So insurance has the effect of minimizing individual deviations from the average. Minimizing deviations results in more economic stability (fewer bankruptcies), so it actually ends up a net gain for the economy.
        • Gambling is zero sum (negative sum if you include the cut taken by the casino). On average, gamblers are losers. On top of that the winners are randomly distributed, so there's no benefit to the economy as with insurance. So gambling is on balance bad for the economy. (The only way it helps the economy is if you count its entertainment value as stress relief for the gamblers. But the few addicted gamblers who gamble too much end up counteracting this benefit on average.)
        • by Anonymous Coward

          Actually what you're talking about is really only applicable to gambling and stocks as entire ecosystems, yes over time all stocks generally head upwards, but for unfortunate individual investors, no amount of time will change the fact that they are bankrupt

          The true distinction between stocks/investing and gambling is that gambling by definition is a game of chance where the odds are entirely arbitrary. Stocks on the other hand have loads of information to inform what choices you make in them and while the

        • Savings accounts are positive sum only if you ignore government's watering the currency ("inflation"). I don't think there's been any time in the last 60 years when the return on a savings account exceeded inflation.
      • Don't forget insurance. That's just another form of gambling as well when it comes down to it.

        There is one important pragmatic difference: You don't see very many insurance addicts blowing their family fortunes on premiums.

        • There is one important pragmatic difference: You don't see very many insurance addicts blowing their family fortunes on premiums.

          But you do see folks blowing the heads off insured people for fortunes.

      • by Roger W Moore ( 538166 ) on Wednesday January 16, 2019 @12:58AM (#57970574) Journal

        Trying to make it illegal is stupid, since it won't stop people.

        Really? Do you want to bet on that?

      • Health insurance is not really insurance and out side of the usa it's more of an Health plan or add on Health plan

    • the government heavily regulates who can buy and sell stocks. You can't for instance, as a small investor, just pick a random company to give money to. There are rules about how, where and when you can invest specifically to prevent predatory investment instruments. To say nothing of the rules about soliciting investments.

      A friend's company went on the lookout for investors for a new product and it's crazy how many rules there are on both sides of the equation. The only thing that makes gambling any dif
      • You can't for instance, as a small investor, just pick a random company to give money to.

        What? Of course you can. You pick one, walk in, drop a bunch of cash, and walk out. Granted that makes you a really shitty investor and the ROI isn't there, but that's totally doable.

    • Blackjack is closer to the market, being based more on chance.

      Poker, being based more on skill... is also closer to the market.

      So there.

  • Trump's Taj Mahal (Score:3, Insightful)

    by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @06:57PM (#57969158) Journal

    The fact that Trump has had an interest in several casinos in the past and says he seeks to be in the casino business again in the future has absolutely nothing to do with his Justice Department outlawing all online gambling.

    Nothing whatsoever.

    • +1 Plausible (if true).
      Certainly fits the profile.
      • by Anonymous Coward

        Well... somehow I doubt this is going to be the straw that breaks the traitor fraud's back.

        • No just add it to the ever-growing heap.
          I'm pretty sure if they can force him to submit his tax returns and other financials we'll find all sorts of dirty dealings, that's why he won't release them.
          Personally I think there should be legislation passed or a Constitutional amendment made (or modified) that requires candidates to submit all that sort of information, among other things. If we had a more rigorous vetting process we might not have had a Trump problem in the first place.
    • Trump has a current interest in casinos in Nevada. He lost his interest in NJ casinos. The SC judgement that came down (and lead to this ruling) allowed non-Nevada casinos (like NJ casinos) to compete online.

      It's more sour grapes than anything, since it's just killing the online market because his share is decreasing.

      • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

        by PopeRatzo ( 965947 )

        It's more sour grapes than anything, since it's just killing the online market because his share is decreasing.

        I would never suggest Trump was doing things for rational reasons. He does it out of grievance and spite, which is how he does everything. It's why a certain subset of the population loves him, because theirs is the politics of grievance and spite.

        Fortunately, enlightened self interest is starting to take hold, which is why his poll numbers are falling. Some people - some smalls subset of the sm

  • For now (Score:2, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward
    I bet you 5 dollars the courts strike this down.
  • Belgium has already made loot boxes illegal due to them being another form of gambling.

    When is the US going to follow?

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      The US and EU will place more demands on what a "game" is.

      When creating a game a trend to ensure the game has something networked well outside the EU and USA will be a way around this control.
      To ensure an easy payment system with some global gift cards is ready and well away from controlling political demands of the EU, USA and the CC on a computer game.
      Make the game able to run on an OS as software outside any control by a US digital distribution platform and its US CC rules.
    • by Kazymyr ( 190114 )

      Not just lootboxes, but more generally speaking almost all online gaming. Many online games rely on dice rolls to calculate the outcome of an action. Strike your opponent with a sword? A dice roll determines the amount of damage that you do. This can fall under the broader definition of "online gambling".

      • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
        The EU and US governments will study the method of payment and then start to ban games, block their ability to to use CC services.
        Pay for a EU nation game once and its ok.
        Pay for a EU nation game once and then pay for an update and its all legal.
        Pay money into a game for an in game currency?
        Have to pay for a new version every year?
        Pay by the month to rent photography and video software? The user never owns the software? The pro software is a professional "loot box"?
        When is converting and using in ga
      • That's _quite_ a bit of a stretch there Skippy.

        If a sword does 1-4 damage you know you are going to roll a 1,2, 3, or 4. There is no bait-and-switch like there is with real gambling where the outcome can be *nothing.*

        Second, no one is complaining about random dice rolls; only about **paying real money** for random loot.

        Spending virtual currency that you earn IN-GAME isn't the problem. Spending _actual_ money is, aka Pay-to-Win, IS.

  • I wonder if it affects loot boxes. Some EU countries think they are basically gambling
    • Yea definitely. You pay $5 for a loot boxes and potentially win an item worth $1000 in some games. Typically you win some skin worth 5 cents but that doesn't stop people from playing for the $1000 item. When I say $1000 also that is the market value of the item due to rarity of the item. In reality it is worth next to nothing (it's a digital copy) that the company could easily mass produce if they wish. So is that gambling? The results seem like gambling but in reality you only win a few 1s and 0s that som
      • Essentially all items can be broken down into a base material that doesn't really reflect its value.

        You buy a real life loot chest and get a Jackson Pollock painting. You can't really argue that it is only worth the price of the canvass and the paint.

        • True but these can be copied exactly an infinite amount of times. Really a game company could start making copies themselves to basically print money. However, if they print too much the price would go down.
          • Consider though that there is more money in existence than there is currency. By quite a long way in fact.

            So for a lot of us money is no different than those 1s & 0s that make up an in game item.

            • I think I get what your saying. In the stock market a company may be worth 1 million dollars but only have $1000 in cash and $100,000 in materials. The value is what people see them doing with those materials for resale value etc. It's all about confidence really. Same with these digital items. When a game's popularity goes down so does the price of it's digital goods. I just find it funny that 20 years ago no one was paying for skins and every company that did micro-transactions or charged for updates was
    • As an avid gambler and video gamer who follows legal trends in both fields, I'd say a quick and dirty test is how easily the value can be officially extracted from the system.

      In a casino, I take my chips, walk 30 feet to a counter and get cash. In most online games... There's no official mechanism, just black market exchanges against the ToS. In parts of Asia, you put money in, get points, redeem for a tsochke, sell the tsochke to a store across the street. In an arcade, you put money in, get tickets, redee

  • ...what about lockboxes, then?

  • Let'em bet it. Let'em win or lose. The mechanism or location used for placing the bet and conducting the transaction should not matter. My father always told me never to bet money that I was not willing to lose. If it's a bad bet, and you don't know it, then you're the fool. And, a fool and his/her money will soon be parted. If you're at a poker table and you don't know who the weakest player at the table is, then it's you! Same holds when you're doing things on the internet.

    This whole thing about re

  • I've never understood why gambling is so much of a controlled substance here in the US. I can buy scratch tickets at the gas station, pull tabs at the bar, and nobody ever gets raided for playing poker.... but for some reason every few years there seems to be some big gambling scare. I've always kind of assumed it was just marketing to get people to go to Vegas?

    Somebody enlighten me.

    • A lot of it is morality laws, but there is also a very important reason - regulation and cheating. If the stat wasn't behind the scratch tickets (or auditing them), it would be very easy for them to lie about the odds. And that matters, because although gambling is a bad investment, your expected loss determines how expensive it is as a hobby/fun activity. I mean, if you piss away $50 at a blackjack table, that may be a fun evening for you. If only 1/2 the aces were being dealt, you were cheated. That's

      • by djinn6 ( 1868030 )

        Those regulations are for the casinos, not the gamblers. If a few of them started cheating, they'd make more money than the rest. But it'll give a lot of customers bad experiences in the process, which drives them away from the activity. All other casinos then make less money. It's a case of the tragedy of the commons, with gamblers being the field and casinos being the herders.

    • I've never understood why gambling is so much of a controlled substance here in the US.

      Because it's as addicitve and damaging as some controlled substances are.

      Humans are manipulatable monkeys for the most part. And gambling organisations have shown they have no qualms about using that to the maximum extent regardless of lives they destroyed. The law in this case doesn't recognise some idealised form of human that doesn't really exist, it actually recognises humans as they are.

  • Gee, a cynic would say think that the Trump administration did this to benefit brick-and-mortar casino owners, such as, oh, I don't know, Sheldon Adelson.

  • I would think this benefits physical gambling establishments. Who do we know that owns physical gambling establishments?

  • All insurance is based on statistical risk. Is selling insurance online now illegal?

  • How does a Justice Dept opinion become "US Now Says...Blah, Blah, Blah"? Especially considering that opinion isn't binding, and not representative of the US. The courts will tell us what is and isn't legal when they get a case to respond to. And clearly, it is legal within state lines no matter what Justice says because SCOTUS...wait for it...trumps them.

  • Among other definitions ! I found online that a state line is: "a border between one state and another in a country with states"

    This would seem to mean that it does not apply to crossing the border between, say, Minnesota and Canada and perhaps again crossing the border between Canada and Alaska.

    Maybe Alaska will become the online vegas

    • A province is legally considered a state.

      Tip: If you think you've come across a totally awesome legal loophole based on using certain words, you haven't come across a loophole and the judge will be very annoyed at your pedantry.

  • Are these not basically gambling for kids? Fuck off Activision and EA
  • The biggest gambling racket in the world is Wall Street. Investing is nothing more than gambling and should be taxed and regulated as such.
  • what about sites like draft kings, that are being pushed and encouraged by the sport leagues themselves?

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