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- May 3, 2010
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lol good title. anyways, does anyone know why all mg casinos got rid of the playboy slot and if it will be back?
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maybe its a canadian thing - it told me tonight my country is banned lol, i couldnt play either

MGS confirmed that Playboy is no longer available for Canadian players![]()

This is beyond ridiculous.
This should have been sorted out before it was released. During the negotiation stage, both parties would have been fully aware of which countries Microgaming served. By doing this, BOTH brands have made themselves the proverbial "laughing stock" as to the outside it looks like the result of corporate blunderings on both sides, followed by a schoolyard "I'm taking my ball home now" response from Playboy because they were unable to get their own way with MGS, presumably as a result of Playboy wanting to change the terms AFTER they had signed the contract, and MGS standing firm on "It's a contract, you signed it, too late now".
This is the kind of corporate squabbling one gets when you resort to multi layered subcontracting, third party licensing, etc. It's not the first time MGS have had egg on their face either, look at the farce that surrounded LOTR, which by now would have been THREE slots, one progressive, if the initial press releases were followed.
Maybe Mr Heffner had his winnings confiscated by a Microgaming casino, and has found a way to vent his anger![]()
Can you provide the source of this "information" please?
Or is this more of your make-it-up-as-you-go-along stuff?
MGS confirmed that Playboy is no longer available for Canadian players![]()
Sucks for Canadians. Never paid for me, too much going in not enough coming back out. I'll happily trade for some Aristocrat games![]()


That would be a first for an MG slot as far as I am aware, which means it would be a licensing issue.

It might be a first for Canadians, but MG have had a lot of slots with "country restrictions"
The dark night, Santas wild ride, leagues of fortune, Isis and propl. others I care less about, are unavailable for Danish players at all MG casinos.
The finer reels of life finally showed up a few months ago, and strangely "lucky witch" (which I thought was old) also recently became available.
At Guts they seem to have given up handling this and now made all MG slots unavaialble to Danish players![]()

What POSSIBLE licensing or copyright issues get in the way of a generic Santa themed slot
*SNIP*


I just won $8000 on the Sofia bonus last week, I guess I was just in time. But I still don't like losing slots that I play I hope this isn't the start of something.![]()

OK, I might not have been entirely clear in my post, sorry
I do not think it has to do with IP and Copyrights, I suspect the reason specific MG slots are not available in DK is due to the Danish Gambling licensensing oganisation "Spillemyndigheden", who I think somehow has to approve every single game, or at least every underlying "engine" - This would explain why the second TFROL was ok at one casino, it showed up at the others, same with the newer Netent slots and other MGs.
As for Isis and The dark knight, I think it is due to the progressive jackpot (hall of gods are not available in DK as well), I believe the "spillemyndigheden" somehow requires Danish taxation on the progressive pool
Also, it seems NordicBet tried to get the WMS slots to DK but failed (I found online "play for free" versions, with NordicBet tags and all text translated to Danish, but they are still not available at any casino with an official DK license)
And BTW "Spillemyndigheden" was certainly not formed with the players in mind, but simply to ensure Danish tax revenue when the EU refused to allow the monoply held by "danske spil" to continue. And to some extend to protect the former monoply at "danske spil" since they pay part of their revenue to Youth organisations of political parties, disability organisations and local youth sports in DK.
The only official DK casino I have seen with an international progressive, is "danske spil" which also runs the official lotteries and used to be the monopoly (and I think it's fair to assume that they are VERY close with "spillemyndigheden" )
better not be the start of a trend
I just won $8000 on the Sofia bonus last week
I really hope that MGS releases a generic clone of this slot (like they did with LOTR/Girls with guns). We don't need semi-nude girls or flashy graphics though, 7's and bars would be just fine!
The one thing that sucks if they were to do that is I have to unlock all the features again, which usually is a costly mission for me.
The one thing that sucks if they were to do that is I have to unlock all the features again, which usually is a costly mission for me.
Minor problem at minimum bet, especially since the "good" feature in the 2nd one.
Just my 2c:
Copyright and TM law is very complex. The rights to a brand like Playboy as an online slot does not even always belong to the obvious party (in this case it does though), these things gets sold, licensed, sub-licensed and who knows what else, and then also per territory, country state and any other arbitrary location you care to come up with. I bet this one has something to do with "Outside the US" vs "North America". I know of at least one (totally unrelated) case where only static images where allowed of a well known brand licensed to a party on the web, as animations would infringe online movie rights (yes, lawyers will go that far).
And as for slots like Isis in Denmark: when operators have to pay for every single game they want to release to be certified, I am sure they will go with what they think will work best in that specific market and slowly build up their portfolio.
Minor problem at minimum bet, especially since the "good" feature in the 2nd one.
Just my 2c:
Copyright and TM law is very complex. The rights to a brand like Playboy as an online slot does not even always belong to the obvious party (in this case it does though), these things gets sold, licensed, sub-licensed and who knows what else, and then also per territory, country state and any other arbitrary location you care to come up with. I bet this one has something to do with "Outside the US" vs "North America". I know of at least one (totally unrelated) case where only static images where allowed of a well known brand licensed to a party on the web, as animations would infringe online movie rights (yes, lawyers will go that far).
Only recently became aware of this thread... I find myself agreeing with what Mustang has said above &You do not have permission to view link Log in or register now.pretty-much echo's what's stated re licensing per territory (IMO).
There is no need to make it so complicated...
For the internet at least, they need to create a separate legal entity called "the web", and treat it like one country, region, territory, etc, and licence a right to the territory of "the web" completely separately to any real world licencing agreements. Anything licenced to "the web" can be distributed to anywhere that can connect to "the web".
In this case, it would appear that if you're moving it (e.g.) from the UK to Canada then the answer is yes.Now, if I move my monitor, am I infringing the online movie rights if it's displaying a static image of said well known brand?
I don't disagree - I'm not the one who makes the rules, I'm simply highlighting something that may be the reason that a game from one supplier may not be available to players in certain countries.
Perhaps, but if the brand owners can make more money by slicing & dicing, then commercially it may make sense to introduce the complexity.
It may well be those who signed the rights for licensed brands on one platform (e.g. offline) may not have considered what they wanted to do on another platform (online), and vice-versa. It may also be that when brand rights are signed, they are offered on limited duration agreements. If this is the case, a supplier may not wish to pay for the rights to distribute something on a platform they're not going to use during the life of aforementioned agreement.
Over the last few years we've seen slot providers launching their content onto platforms they're not traditionally associated with. On the up side, this introduces more variety into what can be played & (typically) more competition in a marketplace works out in the favour of the consumer / player. A down-side to this is potentially what we're seeing here.
In this case, it would appear that if you're moving it (e.g.) from the UK to Canada then the answer is yes.
As players, we may not like it & moving forward, we may see branded slot releases following the preferred platform license you've stated (i.e. "separate legal entity called "the web", and treat it like one country, region, territory, etc"). Bear in mind however, there could be a player cost associated with this approach (e.g. lower RTP to cover the financial costs of signing brands to cover all territories).
and thinking this must be a legitimate casino as it's the only one offering a Playboy themed slot.To quote Nifty in response to one of your earlier posts in this thread, "Can you provide the source of this "information" please?"... I don't recall this being confirmed by any official sources, so I would be interested & thanks in advance for the info. If however you are stating your assumptions as fact, may I respectfully suggest that you refrain from doing so. (There are a number of other instances where you've tripped yourself up by doing this, so perhaps best to avoid it in future(?)).In this case, the online rights have not been signed away, so this shouldn't create problems.
Agreed, but who stated either of the two companies in this example wanted full exclusivity?If an entity wants full exclusivity, they need to pay for ALL the rights, even if they don't intend using them.
Potentially, but I haven't seen any "pirate" versions of the slot to date, so not sure how big of a problem this would be. (From a commercial perspective, I'm pretty sure no developers would go to the time and dev expense to produce it, only to then face the wrath of lawyers chasing for copyright and/or trademark infringements etc. If this wasn't the case, how come there isn't a plethora of 'pirate' games themed on household names?).Whilst slicing and dicing might appear to make more money, the confusion it creates makes enforcement harder, so "leakage" is likely to be higher. To ordinary people, the sheer nit picking involved makes it look like the big producers are having a "toddler tantrum", so it's a case of "well, sod you, I'll just use the Pirate Bay rather than indulge such behaviour". In this case, it would be using a casino that offers "pirate" versions of branded games because that is the only version available. Since the legal alternative to the playboy slot is unavailable in Canada, it's going to be hard for a Canadian player to spot that the only version they can find is actually a pirated copy, so they could end up playing it at Jackpots Heavenand thinking this must be a legitimate casino as it's the only one offering a Playboy themed slot.
Most of the big sportsbook websites have been doing this for almost a decade now, using IP geolocation and/or device default locale information to configure site language, promotions, game availability, etc for their customers. Country localisations have also been further enhanced by the dot country domain suffix now being applied to many site addresses. I guess this is where the 'casino-only' sites have to play catch-up with other sectors of the online gaming market.We are well on the way to having the multi platform multiple provider casino as there needs to be a different configuration for each territory so that ONLY slots that are available to a player are shown to him. They then have to split the marketing so that players don't get told all about a great new game they are never actually going to get.
I am sure they will find a way around it if they want to, by setting up separate companies.This is likely to happen in the UK as the new rules also govern which providers may be used in the UK market as a source of games. It may mean providers like RTG, Rival, and TopGame would not be able to be used by licenced UK facing casinos because they are unlikely to apply for a software supplier licence since they supply so many "black market" operators facing the US.
I am sure they will find a way around it if they want to, by setting up separate companies.
