Online Gambling

Read Complete Research Material

ONLINE GAMBLING

Online Gambling

Online Gambling

Introduction

Not since the advent of e-commerce has an internet-based discovery overridden the doubts and wants of worried persons and legislators: namely internet wagering, a highly contentious appearing international industry. Presently, the lawful offline gaming commerce comprises of numerous types of gambling: casinos (traditional, Native American, Riverboat, to title a few), equine rushing, sports publications, lotteries, and even unanimously acknowledged bingo. Internet bingo, for demonstration, at www.Bingohour.com permits customers to purchase virtual bingo cards for $1 apiece and a bingo number is broadcast on the world broad web location every seven seconds, with jackpots asserted to come to as high as $100,000.

 

Population of Gambling

There are about 250,000 "problem gamblers" in the UK - but the numbers have remained steady since the last survey in 1999. When people whose sole form of gambling is playing the National Lottery are included, the amount of people gambling has dropped from 72% to 68%. When they are excluded, participation in gambling in the past year had risen from 46% to 48% - which, if translated across the UK - would amount to about an extra 1m people. The types of gambling with the most "problem gamblers" are the newest forms of gambling, such as spread betting, fixed odds betting terminals, betting exchanges and online gambling. 68% of the adult population took part in some form of gambling in the past year. The most popular form was the National Lottery draw - 57% of people interviewed had taken part. Participation in the football pools dropped from 9% in 1999 to 3% in 2007. Numbers of people doing the National Lottery and buying scratch cards also dropped. Overall 6% of people questioned used the internet to gamble online. Men are more likely to gamble than women - 71% compared to 65%. # Rates of problem gambling were 0.6% and 0.5% of the gambling population according to two different measures used. But excluding those who only did the National Lottery, between 1.2% and 1.3% of people who had gambled in the past year were estimated to be problem gamblers. Problem gamblers are most likely to be male, single, in poor health and have a parent with a gambling problem. Problem gambling is also "significantly associated" with being black or Asian, separated or divorced, having fewer educational qualifications and being under 55 years old. Spread betting had the highest number of problem gamblers - 14.7%, followed by fixed odds betting terminals (11.2%) and betting exchanges (9.8%).

Gambling laws

Gaming law can be described as the set of rules and regulations that apply to the gaming or gambling industry. Gaming law is not exactly a branch of law in the traditional sense but rather a transversal gathering of a range of legal topics related to gaming which encompasses matters normally included in various branches of law, including constitutional law, administrative law, tax law, company law, contract law and criminal law. In the United States, illegal gambling is a Federal crime if done as a ...
Related Ads