'SKILL WITH PRIZES' DEFINITION UNDER CONSIDERATION
24 July 2009
Do skill games dressed up as roulette or
bingo fall within the SWP definition?
The 'skill with prizes' gambling genre has been under
the UK Gambling Commission microscope lately in order to
ascertain whether or not some games described as SWPs
are in fact gaming machines.
The result is an
opinion that ‘skill games' which are designed to look
like recognised games of chance (such as roulette or
bingo) are games of chance under the Gambling Act 2005.
The Commission also has concerns regarding the
compensation or control mechanism used in some types of
skill machines.
In a letter this week, James
Holdaway, the Commission's policy programme manager,
sets out the Commission's position in more detail.
Holdaway writes that ‘skill games’ which are designed to
look like recognised games of chance (such as roulette
or bingo) are being presented as involving an element of
chance and are therefore games of chance according to
section 6 (2)(a)(iii) of the Act.
"Such machines
are subject to all the regulations and controls which
apply to gaming machines, for example in relation to
supply, location, numbers, stakes and prizes and
technical standards. In this respect, we believe at
least some machines are being illegally sited and
operated. We are contacting the manufacturers of such
machines.
"In addition, and in the light of what
BACTA has told us, the Commission has also developed
grounds for concern regarding the compensation or
control mechanism used in some types of machines. In
particular whether in reality the compensation or
control mechanism operates in such a way that it
introduces an element of chance into the way the game is
played, at least on some occasions. If so, the machines
are gaming machines as defined by section 6(2)(a)(i) of
the Act.
"More widely, we would like to work with
the industry (including BACTA), HMRC and others to
develop a list of characteristics exhibited by genuine
SWP machines to provide the industry, regulators and the
public with greater clarity about the status of
individual machines."
Offshore operators from UK
advertising white-listed jurisdictions are targeted in
mystery shopping program.
The Commission has also
continued to operate a rolling program of mystery
shopping on gambling websites as part of its ongoing
compliance activity.
This programme includes
operators regulated overseas that advertise their
services to the UK market as well as operators licensed
by the Commission.
The programme looks at
various aspects of social responsibility; whether advice
on social responsibility measures is easily accessible;
whether self exclusion is available and clearly
signposted; whether customers can set their own
financial limits; and whether operators prevent people
under 18 years of age from gambling and withdrawing
winnings.
A summary of the results of the program
between April 2008 and March 2009 is available for
public scrutiny at:
http://www.gamblingcommission.gov.uk/UploadDocs/publications/Document/Online
mystery shopping programme July 09.pdf
The
results show that the vast majority of the largest
operators and those with the greatest UK facing business
have sufficient social responsibility measures in place,
with over 99 percent of active customer accounts
registered with operators having easy access to
responsible gambling information, self exclusion
measures and financial limits.
Testing was also
carried out for underage gambling, and the Commission
found that of the websites regulated by the Commission,
over 95 percent of active customers were registered with
operators that had no identified weaknesses, 2.5 percent
were registered with those in the inconclusive category
due to either technical limitations or other factors
that made it difficult to assess the operator and only
2.2 percent were registered with operators that had
weaknesses that, in some circumstances, could allow
under-age persons to gamble and withdraw winnings. These
results are supported by other statistics collated from
complaints, regulatory reporting and research.
All operators licensed by the Commission with
deficiencies have been formally notified and those still
trading here have confirmed to us that remedial action
has been taken. In addition, the Commission has notified
the overseas regulators of the nature of the
deficiencies relating to the social responsibility
measures tested.
"We are working with all
regulators and in many cases action has already been
taken," the Commission reports. "Overseas operators with
deficiencies in relation to our requirements will also
be re-tested and, as part of our remit to advise
Government on gambling issues, we will provide
information to the Secretary of State on the overall
position although not on identified operators."
The Commission's program tested for:
• the
effectiveness of an operator’s systems to prevent
underage gambling; • the availability of customer set
financial limits; • the availability of information
on how to self exclude from gambling facilities; and
• the availability of responsible gambling information.
Initially focused on assessing the age verification
systems of websites licensed by the Commission, the
program was then extended to cover the other key social
responsibility requirements and to include those
operators regulated overseas but permitted to advertise
into the UK. These include operators based in EEA States
(Malta), Gibraltar and jurisdictions that have been
added to the UK Government’s white list. The current
jurisdictions on the white list are Alderney, Antigua
and Barbuda, Isle of Man and Tasmania.
Commission
employees used the identities of 16 year old volunteers
(with parental consent) and a category of bank account
that is commonly available to individuals under the age
of 18. The volunteers’ details and bank account were
then used to attempt to register with online gambling
operators using a false date of birth to make them
appear to be 18 or over. Once registered, the employees
then gambled modest amounts and attempted to withdraw
winnings.
During the test period the Commission
assessed the age verification systems of 37 of its
licence holders. Those tested have some 14.3 million
registered customer accounts with 3.2 million of those
considered active (gambling activity having taken place
within the last 12 months.) These customers may be
located in Britain or overseas.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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