Top 10 Biggest Impacts on Internet Gambling in 2008

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  • raiders72002
    SBR MVP
    • 03-06-07
    • 3368

    #1
    Top 10 Biggest Impacts on Internet Gambling in 2008
    .........
    Top 10 Biggest Impacts on Internet Gambling in 2008

    Submitted by C Costigan on Tue, 12/30/2008 - 08:52.

    Here we are heading into 2009 and it is time to reflect upon 2008 and what were the biggest impacts affecting the online gambling industry. Unfortunately, this was a pretty easy list to create.
    While most of the news was bad, some was quite promising. The fact that politicians the likes of Barney Frank have worked feverishly to get bills passed in hopes of overturning current legislation banning online gambling was certainly a bright note on the year. Oddly enough, so too was the US Treasury Department's releasing of policy enforcement related to the Unlawful Internet Gaming Enforcement Act. As things turned out, they were pretty relaxed.

    10. The World Series of Poker Final Table Delayed Until November - This one had everyone talking. They either liked the idea or hated it. In the end, the impact probably wasn't all that great....at least in terms of affecting play. Aside from a lingering arrest warrant for one of the "November Nine" (as they were often called), there wasn't a whole lot of stuff that could have gone wrong in between the time gap.
    Get used to the delay folks and we probably won't be hearing much complaining next year. The 2008 final table outperformed the 2007 final table with ratings up 46 percent over the year before. On Nov. 11, approximately 2.4 million viewers (representing a Nielsen rating of 1.9) tuned in to watch the November Nine battle it out for $9.1 million and a gold bracelet. Nobody will argue this was a bad decision now.

    9. The Republicans Fire One Last Shot - Just when it appeared as if the Republican party would remove from its platform ridiculous language opposing legalization of online gambling, a few of the diehards insisted such a directive be added. The impact was nominal in the end since the Republican administration was voted out of office.


    8. The Economic Downturn - Online gambling was one of the few industries impacted positively by the current economic crisis though there was hardly reason to celebrate. The reality is that the industry was already crushed by two years of prosecutions and efforts to stymie its very existence.
    Vegas, Macau and other land-based gambling playgrounds were shown not to be recession-proof as previously believed. But people will still gamble, they just might not travel to do so, especially when they can play in their PJs in the comfort of their own living rooms.

    7. The Fall of Bodog - While Bodog is still online, this once proud online gambling website that was nothing more than a blip on the radar until Gamlbing911.com began promoting them, witnessed quite the decline in 2008. First, the company's colorful founder, Calvin Ayre, retired and started spending most of his time in Cuba. Then the US went after Bodog's money. A federal investigation has resulted in a series of subpoenas. Bodog also lost its domain name the year before and has only slightly recovered from that debacle. The folks who won that trademark infringement case, however, are looking to recover a significant chunk of the monies seized by US law enforcement. Meanwhile, Calvin Ayre's name is among the most searched for by those with ".gov" domain extensions on the Gambling911.com website. We are not hiding him!

    6. The US Treasury Department Policy Enforcement of UIGEA - You know what - it wasn't so bad after all. It took nearly two years for the US Treasury Department to figure out how they would enforce a virtually impossible to enforce act that tries to make online gambling illegal. In the end, players would not be breaking any laws, payouts were exempt (as were checks) and the banks were given another one year grace period to develop their monitoring efforts. Of course, this is a billion dollar unfunded mandate...money the banks we now know do not have....unless of course the US Government wants to lend it to them.

    5. PartyGaming Founder Anurag Dikshit Pleas Guilty - Not that he was indicted or charged with any crime, Dikshit felt he might be down the road and that was enough to offer a handout of $300 million to the US Government (probably the IRS in the end). He is also potentially looking at up to two years in prison. For the online poker community, this was a huge blow as the sector has long argued poker is a game of skill and should be exempt from any laws seemingly designed to go after illegal sports betting. Dikshit plead guilty under that very wire act however.


    4. Barack Obama Gets Elected as the First Black President of the United States - What a great moment in history. His message of "change" truly resonated with those living in the US and the world over for that matter. There is much optimism in the online gambling sector. President-Elect Obama himself is a known poker player. Vice President-Elect Joe Biden's son lobbied on behalf of PartyGaming. These are good signs. It remains to be seen whether online gambling prohibition will ultimately be abolished during Obama's first term in office. Powerful Democrats the likes of Barney Frank are working on behalf of the industry and Obama in the White House could help to accelerate things.

    3. Barney Frank Pushing Legislation to Legalize Online Gambling - President Bill Clinton's former speechwriter Josh Gottheimer noted in his book, Ripples of Hope: Great American Civil Rights Speeches, that Frank is one of the nation's "brightest and most energetic defenders of civil rights issues". In 2007 Frank became the chairman of the House Financial Services Committee which oversees housing and banking industries. The New York Times called Frank one of the most powerful members of Congress noting "his ability to build bridges across party lines to pass legislation"
    Congressman Frank has become a household name thanks to the current economic, banking and real estate crisis. Frank is doing everything in his power to help alleviate some of the suffering...a near impossible feat but at least he's trying. Getting online gambling legalized may be the easiest objective on his busy platform. The later is a priority despite other challenges. Barney is a workhorse regardless of whatever faults he might have (most of us have watched the heated exchange between Congressman Frank and Fox News Bill O'Reilly).
    Frank has also partnered with Ron Paul - another great story of 2008 - in support of online gambling rights. In 2006, both strongly opposed H.R. 4777, the Internet Gambling Prohibition and Enforcement Act, and H.R. 4411, the Goodlatte-Leach Internet Gambling Prohibition Act. To restore online gambling rights, in 2007 Frank sponsored H.R. 2046, the Internet Gambling Regulation and Enforcement Act. This bill would have established licensing and regulation of online gaming sites. It provided for age verification and protections for compulsive gamblers. In 2008, he and Paul introduced H.R. 5767, the Payment Systems Protection Act, a bill that sought to place a moratorium on enforcement of the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act while the U.S. Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve defined "unlawful Internet gambling". As a result of these efforts, Frank (who does not gamble) has become a hero to poker players and online gamblers, including many Republicans.
    " I also think with the Obama administration you wouldn't see these bad regulations," Frank told Gambling911.com prior to Obama's win.

    2. Absolute Poker/UltimateBet Cheating Scandal - It was the scandal that wouldn't go away. The Absolute Poker/UltimateBet insider cheating scandal culminated in a much ballyhooed 60 Minutes piece that didn't do much to kill Absolute's business. The company has paid out those they feel could have been affected, they've cooperated in an audit that uncovered some of the culprits behind the cheating (most notably World Series of Poker winner Russ Hamilton). Yet in the end the online poker community has had a tough time accepting Absolute Poker's decision to not release names of some individuals involved. They claim it was the only way to learn how the cheating occurred and to ensure that it never happens again.
    The company can't seem to get any breaks as they close out 2008. In December, revelations surfaced that its own professional poker player spokesperson, Phil Hellmuth, won a bad hand while playing on the new online poker platform. Most agree it was probably nothing more than a software glitch, but the past scandal has helped to foster many a conspiracy theory.
    On a bright note, none of this negative news appears to have impacted business for North America's third largest online poker venture. Unlike a few of their competitors (most notably Bodog and PartyPoker), Absolute has lost little if any market share.
    Their new CFO, Paul Liggett, should help to right the ship in 2009 from a PR perspective.

    1. Kentucky Goes After Online Gambling Domain Names - To say the state of Kentucky's efforts to seize some 140 online gambling domain names was the biggest story affecting the multi-billion dollar industry in 2008 would be quite the understatement. In fact, this would qualify as one of the biggest industry stories of the past 10 years.
    The sun shines bright in the old Kentucky home,
'Tis summer, the people are gay. Well, actually that's still a crime in Kentucky. Gambling is NOT! But in an effort to protect the commonwealth's own horse racing industry, Governor Steve Beshear went after online gambling with reckless abandonment. He bypassed the state legislature to do so, opting instead to hire an outside Chicago firm to do the dirty work. A circuit court judge found in favor of the state and an appeal by The Interactive Media Entertainment & Gaming Association has stopped any domain seizures from taking place for the time being.
    But God bless Kentucky for waking the sector up.

    And best wishes for a wonderful 2009 from your friends at Gambling911.com. Let's hope for a good one.
    Christopher Costigan, Gambling911.com Publisher
  • raiders72002
    SBR MVP
    • 03-06-07
    • 3368

    #2
    ......
    10 Most Influential in Online Gambling (2008)

    Submitted by C Costigan on Wed, 12/31/2008 - 00:14.

    Gambling911.com yesterday looked at 10 of the most influential events involving the online gambling sector yesterday. Today we look at the 10 most influential people and/or groups impacting online gambling in 2008.
    Two of the usual suspects fail to make an appearance in this year's Top 10 list. It is easy to understand why Bodog's charismatic founder, Calvin Ayre, would have been featured among the top 10 in any given year between 2003 and 2007. After all, it was he who appeared on the Forbes Billionaire's issue cover in 2006. In 2008, Ayre rode off into the sunset, presumably to retire. The months leading up to his retirement, Ayre failed to make much news (the writing was thereby on the wall).
    Arizona Republican Senator Jon Kyl has enjoyed a much longer tenure on Top 10 year ending lists for the better part of a decade. It is he who has long been considered the industry's biggest and outspoken nemesis. But in 2008 Jon Kyl was a little too quiet to make Gambling911.com's Top 10. Somehow we have a feeling he'll be right back on it in 2009, so let's hold back the tears for now.
    Also not quite making the list but deserving of an honorable mention: Scott Lewis of 1st Technology - Claiming a trademark infringement violation, Lewis and his group were single-handedly able to take down the Bodog.com website forcing that beleaguered company to find an alternative web address, which they did. The problem: Bodog.com was already poised in all the top search engine positions and they lost all of them. While the company has been able to come back (including in search), Lewis' action was devastating and they are yet to fully recover. In 2008, Lewis broadened his efforts to go after a number of other online gambling entities. But compared to the commonwealth of Kentucky's efforts, Lewis can almost be viewed as Mother Theresa. Well, not quite.
    10. Ron Paul - This Republican gained huge support among the Internet gambling sector and for a little while anyway looked like he could make a serious run for the US Presidency. Afterall, the Texas Congressman managed to beat GOP nominee John McCain in a couple of the early campaigns and raised more money than anyone else outside of Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton. Ron Paul even co-sponsored a piece of legislation looking to overturn the current Unlawful Internet Gaming Enforcement Act. If only Fox News had paid more attention to him and the economy had fallen apart months earlier.
    9. Ivan Demidov - This Russian born poker player didn't win either the World Series of Poker or its sister event in Europe this past year. He did, however, manage what many would think is close to impossible. Demidov made the final table of both tournaments. He also finished a strong second in the 2008 WSOPE. If you think the folks aren't embracing poker in Russia the same way those in the US did after Chris Moneymaker's remarkable WSOP win, think again. And much of this translates into the world of online poker.

    8. The Poker Players Alliance - While former New York Senator Alfonse D'Amato is a strong personality, he wasn't vocal enough to make our Top 10 on his own. And certainly PPA President John Pappas is like the cat that meows outside your window all night long but when you go to feed it, he darts off into the night. The PPA as a collective unit has made an impact on our industry that cannot be denied. To say the leadership here has been outstanding would raise a few eyebrows. To say they have done an above average job of rousing the troops is more a fair statement. They cannot afford in 2009 to drop the ball. Everything they did in 2008 has to be raised at least two notches. This is going to be a crucial year. Changes in the leadership structure might be unavoidable unless this animal is put into overdrive.
    7. The Interactive Media Entertainment & Gaming Association (iMEGA.org) - Not much was expected of this fledgling trade organization when it came to the forefront earlier this year. Much as the industry reacted when Gambling911.com first started touting a little known online gambling company called Bodog.com in 2002, pundits laughed off iMEGA as some type of opportunists. A few even accused them of being "US government informants" - and still do for that matter. Unlike the PPA, iMEGA was especially aggressive, which eventually helped these newcomer make a fast impact. Like John Pappas, iMEGA founder, Joe Brennan, Jr., is like the cat that meows outside your window all night long, only when you go to feed him, he scratches you. That's the story of iMEGA. They've been scratching and clawing this past year (a lawsuit against the US Government, filling an Appeals case against the commonwealth of Kentucky). In 2009, they will need to deliver... at least on one front. That probability is higher than 50 percent in our opinion - more so in favor of a positive outcome involving Kentucky's online gambling domain seizure matter. It is also vital that iMEGA remains loyal to those who have supported it early in the game.
    6. Joe Norton- The Former Kahnawake Chief who now oversees Absolute Poker and a few dozen other online gambling enterprises has managed to make quite a name for himself, mostly the result of a much publicized cheating scandal involving Absolute Poker he had nothing to do with. But it is his name and the Kahnawakes as a whole who arguably have helped to keep Absolute Poker in business. We've covered dozens of similar stories over the past 10 years Different characters, different plots, but the endings were all the same. Said company dissolves. That hasn't happened with Absolute Poker. Joe and his crew have done well here despite what many perceived to be a "flawed" first audit of the company.
    5. Barack Obama - Thoughout his long winding campaign in 2008, much of the online gambling industry rooted for the Illinois Senator to become the next President of the United States. After all, he was touted as "the poker playing President". His runningmate's son lobbied for PartyGaming. Whether we see a change in policy remains to be seen but in the i-Gaming sector Obama's message of "hope" perhaps resonates more so than anywhere else.
    4. Anurag Dikshit and Ruth Parasol - The two billionaire co-founders of PartyGaming, Parasol's lobbying efforts for the online gambling industry are often unappreciated. There are many convinced that without her, the Poker Players Alliance would not exist today. Of course, Dikshit made news in recent weeks after he entered into a plea agreement with the US Government whereby one of the wealthiest men in the world must forfeit $300 million to US authorities. To put this in perspective, for Dikshit it's like tipping the waiter a little extra in a fancy restaurant. There is plenty of anger being lodged at him by those in the poker community.

    3. Spencer Bachus - Now assuming the role of arch nemesis to the online gambling sector, this Alabama Republican Congressman came up with one of the better quotes of the year: "One click of the mouse and you lose your house". He was referring to Web gambling. Bachus has a mostly, but not totally, conservative voting record. And it shows in his tireless efforts to obliterate Internet gambling. Just how dangerous is Bachus to the industry? Here is another of his more famous quotes:
    "All of these (studies) say the younger someone starts gambling, the more likelihood that they become a compulsive gambler. Addicted to gambling, just like addicted to drugs. So there is a correlation between drug dealers and gambling sites."
    2. Barney Frank - Maybe he should be first on our list. Barney - unlike our top choice - hasn't quite brought the industry to its knees. He is one of the most powerful people in Congress and thankfully a fierce supporter of one's right to gamble online.
    Frank has also partnered with Ron Paul in support of online gambling rights. In 2006, both strongly opposed H.R. 4777, the Internet Gambling Prohibition and Enforcement Act, and H.R. 4411, the Goodlatte-Leach Internet Gambling Prohibition Act. To restore online gambling rights, in 2007 Frank sponsored H.R. 2046, the Internet Gambling Regulation and Enforcement Act. This bill would have established licensing and regulation of online gaming sites. It provided for age verification and protections for compulsive gamblers. In 2008, he and Paul introduced H.R. 5767, the Payment Systems Protection Act, a bill that sought to place a moratorium on enforcement of the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act while the U.S. Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve defined "unlawful Internet gambling". As a result of these efforts, Frank (who does not gamble) has become a hero to poker players and online gamblers, including many Republicans.

    And our Number One Most Influential Person of Online Gambling in 2008.... Drum roll please....

    It's Gambling911.com's Jenny Woo!

    No. It's not! Actually this was an easy one....


    1. Kentucky Governor Steve Beshear - Who else could get about two dozen of the most respected attorneys in Kentucky together in a court room defending the online gambling industry....in Kentucky of all places? When news broke in September that Beshear was looking to seize some 140 plus Web gambling domain names, there were folks in the European gaming sector who had never even heard of Kentucky. Why, there were folks in the United States who couldn't find the state on a map! Then reality hit hard. A state best known for its bourbon, horse racing and - as we later learned - pizza (home to both Pizza Hut and Papa John's), was about to knock more than 100 websites of the Internet, and that would only be the beginning. What seemed surreal at first quickly became a reality as a Kentucky Circuit Court judge found in favor of the commonwealth (state). Had there not been an appeal filed, all of these domain names would today be in the hands of some maniacal religious zealots whose legal counsel compared online poker room operators to child molesters. Even Spencer Bachus wouldn't stoop that low. The honorable Judge Thomas Wingate, who ruled in favor of the commonwealth (and got plenty of flack for doing so in the local press) commented: "I've never seen so many lawyers in my courtroom". This was a wake up call like no other for the industry... with ramifications extending well beyond its borders. Ask any of those 140 plus domain owners who the most influential person of online gambling is in 2008 and we seriously doubt they'll take a moment to pause in naming Kentucky Governor Steve Beshear.
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