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The problem is most gamblers are compulsive liars![]()


One more suggestion!Thank you KasinoKing - for somebody who is doing a PhD - Im not very bright am I? I would never have thought of that - shame on me!![]()



you are right winalot but do you think it is easier to gamble online? In the UK the Gambling Act (Septe 2007) made gambling a lot easier here - ie instant registration at a land-based casino and instant play - but online is it just made even easier ? Easier to gamble? Easier to play? Easier to get into trouble? Easier to get a problem? I am just looking at safeguards - though if they work, what they do - that's a long way off. This is from my next paper:
During the last two decades, as Internet access expanded into workplaces and homes, gamblers have been introduced to a new realm of gambling opportunities. Traditional gambling products, available in land-based venues, soon appeared in an online form and are easily accessible with an Internet connection and credit card. Internet casino games, slot machines, bingos, lotteries, sports betting, horse race betting, and skill games are all now readily accessible, with new forms of gambling and new ways of remote gambling, including games consoles, 3G mobile phones and interactive television continually being added. The British Government has taken steps to implement and regulate Internet gambling opportunities and whilst there are a number of economic and political incentives for them to do so, it is vital to gain a more complete understanding of the social costs and risks of this endeavour. One area of concern is the difficulty in restricting access to prohibited individuals, as well as the prevalence of online gambling by these individuals (i.e., underage gamblers, voluntary self-excluders, gambling site employees, and intoxicated individuals). A second area of concern is evidence suggesting that Internet gambling attracts problem gamblers, or perhaps has a greater propensity to create problem gamblers. A pilot study found a 42.7% prevalence rate of problem gambling among 1, 920 people accessing an online gambling portal (Wood & Williams, 2004).
This is the kind of way my study is going ....

I think that the argument is that the setting of the online environment such as 24/7 gambling, the anonymity factor, in the privacy of your own home, possibly uninterrupted - has the propensity to create more problem gamblers.



Merged with this one, as always.
]Hi carjaw,
Just a few things.
If you are conducting research for an advanced degree (MBA, MFA, Ph.D, etc.), you need to bone up on your English. Specifically your paragraph structure, punctuation and grammar. Your above post is just one heaped together paragraph - which is a no go, even for an undergrad.
To be honest, I didn't bother reading it.
If you want people to take what you have to say seriously, then please work on the presentation of your ideas.
Also, please do not exploit this forum for your own rewards. I would appreciate it if you would participate in other topics besides your own. Thank you.
What exactly is your problem with me?
like i said before i cut myself off - i just cant win - whatever i do - but i am not here to win

Thank you for your comments. I went to Aspers casino last night and had a smoked salmon and brie sandwich with coffee - very nice. Survey fatigue is a problem - but there is very little research looking at harm minimisation measures and online gambling. Perhaps my study - perhaps - will have something to say - who knows. I am also, very very pleased with the number of responses and thankful to the respondents who spent a few minutes.
). When it comes to research revealing serious shortcomings in an industry with deep pockets, the fight can sometimes get "dirty", so you will need to ensure your conclusions are robust enough to withstand anything that can be thrown at it.For me - the PhD student - my point is - the Government or the Gambling Commission / the regulators should do more to protect problem gamblers; in particular, that the gambling industry should deal with problem gamblers in a unified manner. And of course, thisis the issue central to my study. Also, the current system, in which each operator has its own stand-alone social responsibility policy, may not go far enough to deal with problem gambling effectively. Should all operators agree that when there is a problem - they are going to act responsibly?




Good article, I've seen many articles today, but only this article is of interest to me, thanks "snip"
Not cool posting in a thread that is eight years old and putting a link to a casino to boot. Post reported!
Not cool posting in a thread that is eight years old and putting a link to a casino to boot. Post reported!
I'm embarrassed to say that it took me far too long to notice this...
