BRIT NATIONAL LOTTERY CRASHES
2 January 2009
Massive technical problems deprive many Brits of
the chance to take a chance
The British national lottery operator Camelot had the
embarassing problem of explaining a four hour computer
crash Saturday which deprived many would-be lotto
players of the opportunity to take a ticket, either in
retail outlets or over the Internet.
A Camelot spokesman insisted there was no question of
the draws being postponed to allow disappointed players
to obtain tickets, and all games went ahead as normal
including the main Lotto draw with a GBP 3.1 million
jackpot.
"The rules, terms and conditions are clear. People have
to be in the draw to win a prize. We have been selling
tickets all week and earlier on Saturday morning," he
said. "We do, however, apologise for any inconvenience
caused. It is too early to speculate on the potential
impact on sales."
The spokesman told The Telegraph newspaper that the
fault had been "intermittent" and added that he was
unable to say how many terminals had been affected.
Carole Machin, presenter of the draw in BBC One's
programme National Lottery: In It To Win It, made an
on-air apology to customers who had been affected.
The Telegraph reports that the current breakdown is one
of the most wide-ranging technical failures since the
Lottery was launched in 1994. Lost ticket sales will
also mean that the Lottery's "good causes" will suffer a
fall in the amount of cash distributed from takings.
A system error prevented retailers across the country
from printing off tickets. In central London last night,
players were greeted with signs saying terminals were
"unavailable".
A message to customers on the National Lottery website
said the main Lotto draw, Euro Millions, Thunderball,
Dream Number, Daily Play and Lotto Hot Picks were all
unavailable to online gamers.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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