David_1
846
2015/10/17 11:50
#316507
Manne wrote:
It’s been a bad couple of weeks for the daily fantasy sports gaming industry, as accusations of insider information coupled with growing questions of fairness and lax oversight put the industry’s two biggest sites—DraftKings and FanDuel—in the crosshairs of federal investigators. On Thursday, the Nevada Gaming Commission delivered a serious, if symbolic, blow to the sites by ruling them games of chance, not skill, and ordered them to shutdown operations in the state until they obtained a gambling license. DraftKings is based in Boston and FanDuel is headquartered in New York City.
While Nevada is only one state, its determination that the sites qualify as gambling is what the upstart world of daily fantasy sports is worried about. The industry has been able to thrive by sidestepping the 2006 Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act that outlawed online sports betting and poker. The distinction written into the law that allowed the sites to evade the same regulatory oversight as those forms of online gambling is that fantasy sports are, allegedly, games of skill, not chance.
Nevada regulators disagree and ordered the sites to shut down effective immediately in the state of Nevada, effectively prohibiting residents of the state from participating. While Nevada is not the only state to outlaw the practice (the games are legal in 45 states), nor the first state to investigate the industry, the state, as home to the casino industry does have a particular interest in having the sites shuttered, as the multi-billion dollar daily fantasy sports gaming industry has risen swiftly and significantly enough to become unwelcome competition for the state’s bread and butter.
“Lawmakers have been intensifying calls for federal regulation and inquiries into the industry,” according to the New York Times.
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2008/12/18
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846
While Nevada is only one state, its determination that the sites qualify as gambling is what the upstart world of daily fantasy sports is worried about. The industry has been able to thrive by sidestepping the 2006 Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act that outlawed online sports betting and poker. The distinction written into the law that allowed the sites to evade the same regulatory oversight as those forms of online gambling is that fantasy sports are, allegedly, games of skill, not chance.
Nevada regulators disagree and ordered the sites to shut down effective immediately in the state of Nevada, effectively prohibiting residents of the state from participating. While Nevada is not the only state to outlaw the practice (the games are legal in 45 states), nor the first state to investigate the industry, the state, as home to the casino industry does have a particular interest in having the sites shuttered, as the multi-billion dollar daily fantasy sports gaming industry has risen swiftly and significantly enough to become unwelcome competition for the state’s bread and butter.
“Lawmakers have been intensifying calls for federal regulation and inquiries into the industry,” according to the New York Times.