BETFAIR CHALLENGES AUSSIE OPERATORS ON RESPONSIBLE
GAMBLING (Update)
6 February 2009
Make all operators offer punters pre-set spending
limits, says betting exchange group
Betfair Australia's feisty CEO, Andrew Twaits responded
to recent criticism of online gambling sign up bonuses
(see previous InfoPowa reports) with a challenge of his
own this week - the government should make it compulsory
to do more in the responsible gambling milieu by
requiring operators to offer gamblers a facility to
pre-set their spending limits.
Twaits refuted recent claims by anti-online gambling
activists and politicians that bonus offers fuelled
problem gambling, the newspaper The Courier Mail
reported.
"The offering of free bets is ... no different to pokie
venues offering $3 roast meals to get people in the door
or the local TAB offering free pizzas to get people in,"
Twaits said, giving an alternative view that problem
gambling can instead be linked to the unlimited
anonymous betting offered by pokies venues, TABs and
some online agencies.
"I think one of the real dangers with cash-based betting
is that the wagering operator has no way of knowing
who's betting with them and whether that person is
betting beyond what they want to spend," Betfair's
Australian head man opined.
"We'd be advocating that everything should be
account-based, that all operators should allow customers
to set loss limits."
Twaits said Betfair invited customers to set daily,
weekly and monthly loss limits, which could only be
changed after a seven-day cooling-off. All operators -
including pokies venues, TABs and online agencies -
should offer similar controls as a condition of their
licence, he said.
The call won immediate support from Relationships
Australia's gambling help program leader Noel Condie.
"I'm totally in favour of it," Condie said. "We would
like to see some sort of effective measure to help
people to pre-commit (to a limit) before they gamble. It
would give the gambler more control."
However, Condie disputed Betfair's claim that the offer
of "free" bets of up to $1 000 did not contribute to
problem gambling.
Queensland Treasurer Andrew Fraser was also opposed to
"free" bets, but said Queensland alone could not ban the
practice since the High Court last year cleared the way
for online betting agencies to operate across state
borders.
"What we need here is a co-ordinated national approach,"
Fraser said. "That's the only way we are going to be
able to deal with this."
Betfair was also in the news this week with its
investigation into what could be another tennis online
betting scandal. The company's advanced technology that
enables it to minutely analyse betting patterns is a
powerful weapon in the drive to eliminate corruption
from gambling on tennis matches, and is deployed in
suspicious cases.
In the latest incident, Betfair is examining bets
associated with a tennis match in Zagreb over the
weekend. Betting websites have claimed "an in-the-run
coup appears to have been landed" after Croat Antonio
Veic upset Argentine Guillermo Canas. The wildcard,
ranked 255th in the world, beat Canas 4-6 6-4 6-2.
Canas opened as a 1.11 favourite pre-match with Betfair.
But, after winning the first set, Canas drifted to
$7.00. At the same time, Veic shortened from $7.40 to
$1.10 as suggestions emerged Canas may have had an arm
injury.
"We are aware of the speculation surrounding the betting
patterns on this match," a statement from Betfair
advised. "This market will remain suspended pending
internal investigation."
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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