EUROPEAN NATIONS GOING THEIR OWN WAY IN ONLINE
GAMBLING?
3 July 2009
New survey indicates a trend toward insulated
national regulatory regimes
Possibly encouraged by the impact of the Unlawful
Internet Gambling Enforcement Act in the United States,
at least seven European Union nations are planning on
travelling their own route on Internet gambling
regulation, a new survey by Gambling Compliance shows.
Titled ‘Market Barriers: A European Online Gambling
Study 2009’ the study took several months of research by
a seven-strong legal research team, the portal revealed
this week, claiming the work is the first major survey
of Europe’s cross-border gambling market since a
European Commission-backed study produced by the Swiss
Institute of Comparative Law in 2006.
The team
found that with no formal EU-level rules on cross-border
internet gambling in prospect, a majority of European
Union member states are now actively considering reforms
to bring about their own national-level controls on the
activity.
"While definitive legal clarity from
either European officials in Brussels or from the
European Court of Justice has been lacking, the new
report nevertheless finds that 19 European governments
are currently engaging in discussions regarding internet
gambling in their jurisdictions," and announcement from
Gambling Compliance informs.
“Even as other EU
member states follow the leads of Italy and the UK in
expressly regulating internet gambling, the vast
majority of European jurisdictions will continue to
restrict access to their gambling markets to those
operators they license and their government-sanctioned
monopolies,” the research team predicts.
"Seven
European states have already made concrete plans to
introduce a national licensing system for remote
gambling – plans which, in most cases, are to be
underpinned by blocking mechanisms to halt financial
transactions and deny internet access to unlicensed
gambling websites."
“There is no question that
ISP and payments blocking policies have gathered
momentum in Europe since the introduction of the
Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act in the United
States in October 2006,” notes Harry Ashton,
GamblingCompliance’s head of legal and regulatory
research.
“But, as experiences in US have shown,
there are significant doubts as to how effective these
blocking mechanisms will actually prove to be. In
addition, the policies raise new legal questions for
payments and internet service providers – including
several related to European law,” Ashton added.
New business opportunities are emerging as the European
scenario evolves, with an increasing desire among media
groups, terrestrial gaming operators and
state-sanctioned lotteries to embrace online gambling,
Ashton added. “On the one hand, this represents new
competition for internet gaming operators. However, it
also provides an opportunity for them to offer their
expertise to new market entrants either through
partnerships and white label deals, or as software or
payments solutions providers.”
The
GamblingCompliance report provides a detailed analysis
of relevant rules and restrictions applied to internet
gambling for each of the 27 EU member states and Norway.
It also provides a breakdown of applicable ECJ case law
and recent infringement actions taken by the European
Commission and other European bodies.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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