Monthly Archives: January 2019

Fable Media launches new online casino affiliate site, GoWin, in the UK

January 2, 2018 [Copenhagen, Denmark] – Fable Media, the international iGaming brand, have launched a brand new online casino affiliate site GoWin. Diverging from the established GoWin Casino site (which remains in operation), GoWin will focus exclusively on offering online and mobile casino reviews and recommendations.

GoWin is one of Fable Media’s most popular casino sites. Yet, to avoid further confusion and improve user experience, they will now run the online casino – GoWin Casino – and the affiliate site GoWin separately.

In doing this, the new GoWin affiliate site will be filled with fresh and engaging content, including in-depth and trustworthy casino reviews and gaming guides. The site will also promote new casino and software brands, offer its readers exclusive bonus and promotion alerts, and keep them updated as to what’s going on in the iGaming world.

In addition, GoWin will continue to be accessible for all. The site will be optimized for all devices and boast a mobile-friendly design. The reviews and guides will also take on a friendly, easy to read tone which will help to build a good rapport with readers.

Denmark gambling regulator hails success against illegal market

Denmark’s regulated online gambling market has resulted in a “limited” market for illegal gambling operators, although social media gambling and skin betting remain a problem.

A new report by Denmark’s Spillemyndigheden regulatory agency claims that the number of unauthorized gambling sites offering services to local gamblers without local permission identified remains “continuously low.”

Through December 2018, Spillemyndigheden conducted three web searches to identify illegal gambling operators and sites promoting such operations. These searches identified 742 possibly problematic websites, more than twice the number identified in 2017, although Spillemyndigheden noted that the 2018 searches were “broader than usual to ensure that previously legal sites have not changed their contents.”

These 742 problematic sites resulted in 22 petitions sent to the website operators notifying them of their violation of the Danish Act on Gambling. Spillemyndigheden eventually ordered local internet service providers to block 18 of the offending gambling sites who failed to respond to these petitions.

Caesars, Oneida Nation ink New York sports betting partnership

Casino operator Caesars Entertainment Corp (CEC) has inked a New York sports betting partnership with tribal gaming operator Oneida Indian Nation.

On Wednesday, Caesars and the Oneidas announced their new “innovative alliance for sports betting and marketing” that will bring legal sports betting to the Oneidas’ three upstate New York casinos, including the Turning Stone Resort Casino in Verona, the Yellow Brick Road Casino and Point Place Casino.

The new partners say their licensing and branding arrangement will start with the launch of “The Lounge with Caesars Sports” at Turning Stone later this year, pending a review of the partnership by the National Indian Gaming Commission and the New York State Gaming Commission issuing new sports betting regulations.

Oneida Nation representative Ray Halbritter said his group was pleased to be teaming up with Caesars, which he claimed was “in a class of its own” when it comes to sports betting. Caesars’ exec VP of gaming Christian Stuart claimed that the Oneidas “share our commitment to exceeding guest expectations” and predicted great things for the Turning Stone’s new sports lounge.

Cambodia added 52 new casino licenses in 2018

Cambodia’s casino market underwent a dramatic expansion in 2018, thanks to the rapid development of the Sihanoukville region’s gaming sector.

New official numbers from Cambodia’s Ministry of Economy and Finance show there were 150 active casino licenses at the end of 2018, up from just 98 at the end of 2017. Cambodia’s Preah Sihanouk province alone had 88 active casino licenses at the end of last year.

The government has yet to issue specifics on how much revenue it reaped from the gaming industry in 2018. But Ros Phirun, deputy director of the General Department of Financial Industry, told the Phnom Penh Post that the ministry had previously forecast gaming tax and fee revenue of $56m. That would be more than twice the sum the government collected in 2014.

Phirun said the ministry expected to push its gaming revenue even further once the government finishes drafting its new gambling legislation. However, the government has been promising to deliver this legislation for years now and the finished document never seems to get any closer to reality.

Microgaming celebrates the new year with live content in Sweden

ISLE OF MAN – Microgaming content is live in Sweden after the leading online gaming supplier introduced a bespoke solution to the market via its award-winning entertainment platform.

This follows on from the regulatory framework set out by the Swedish Gaming Authority which came into effect on 1 January 2019.

Over the last few months, Microgaming has supported its operators closely during the licence application process by providing them with supporting documentation and information needed for the Swedish regulated market.

Microgaming’s operators can now easily and effortlessly switch to a refined solution with localised content tailored specifically for the Swedish market. The new dedicated domain will provide operators with a portfolio of Microgaming’s top performing games, optimised across mobile and desktop, including table games, classic and branded slot titles such as Game of Thrones™ and Immortal Romance, as well as access to the industry’s largest progressive jackpot network, which has paid out over €973 million to date.

New chairman Gavin Isaacs brings gaming expertise to SBTech

That didn’t take long.

On Wednesday, sports betting and gaming technology supplier SBTech announced that it has tapped Gavin Isaacs as its new non-executive chairman. Isaacs joins SBTech officially on January 2.

The appointment comes almost a month after Isaac gave up his seat on the board as well as his position as vice chairman of gaming equipment supplier Scientific Games, effective December 3. At the time, Isaacs was quoted by the Las Vegas Review-Journal as saying that he has no plans to retire, but that it’s “time for a change.”

Change indeed came for the executive, who has set his sights on making a return into the gaming industry. According to SBTech, Isaacs will use his two decades of gaming experience “to further grow the company’s rapidly expanding U.S. presence.”

NFL push for integrity fee misdirected

Ever since the U.S. Supreme Court knocked down the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act (PASPA) last May, states across the land are scrambling to get into the sports gambling business. Several states have already passed their own sets of laws to oversee the activity, while several more are expected to introduce legislation this year. Even before the Justices reached a decision, professional sports leagues such as the NFL and NBA were vocalizing their opinion that sports wagers should include an “integrity fee” paid to the leagues in order to allow them to police their games and ensure teams didn’t try to rig the outcome. They have argued that the fee could be anywhere from 1-4%, which could result in millions of dollars more added to their piggy banks. In the case of the NFL, perhaps they need to consider charging the league’s teams the integrity fee – not sportsbooks.

The NFL (and others, but we’re only interested in the NFL right now) has a rule, the Personnel (Injury) Report Policy. Per the policy as it was released in 2017 (in pdf), “The Personnel (Injury) Report Policy has been a cornerstone of public confidence in the NFL for many decades. The credibility of the NFL, teams, owners and team personnel requires full compliance with and uniform enforcement of the policy. The intent is to provide full and complete information on player availability. It is NFL policy that information for dissemination to the public on all injured players be reported in a satisfactory manner by clubs to the league office, the opposing team, local and national media, and broadcast partners each game week of the regular season and postseason.”

That opening structure seems to be cut-and-dry and doesn’t allow for much leeway in its interpretation. It is surprising, then, that the Pittsburgh Steelers overtly lied on a recent injury report, concealing the fact that wide receiver Antonio Brown wasn’t going to miss the game against the Cincinnati Bengals for injuries, but, rather, because of an internal team dispute.

As Mike Florio of NBC Sports points out, “As one league source has observed, ‘overt lying’ on the injury report is a much bigger problem than Brown’s antics, because shenanigans with the injury report speak to competitive issues, about which the league office should be very concerned. It’s unknown whether the league office actually is concerned or will take action; the NFL has not responded to an inquiry from PFT regarding the situation.”

Macau’s anti-smoking policy goes live

No one in Macau can say that they haven’t had time to prepare. Announced more than a year ago, a new smoking ban is now in effect, prohibiting smoking in a number of places, including casinos. Exceptions are made for certain smoking lounges inside the venues, provided they meet a long list of stringent requirements and are approved upon inspection. Going into the final quarter of 2018, however, there were still a number of locations that had not applied to have their lounges inspected.

According to the Macau Health Bureau, it had approved 378 smoking lounges as of this past Monday, December 31. 346 of these had applied for approval before September 28 – the deadline for all applications – which was 85.6% of the 404 smoking lounges that had submitted their requests.

The bureau added that 13 gaming venues had still not requested smoking lounge approvals. These included, Casino de Presidente, Eastern Casino, Grandview Casino, Macau Jockey Club Casino, Casino Grand Drago, the Royal Dragon Casino and seven Melco Resorts venues branded as the Mocha Club. These include Mocha Hotel Sintra, Mocha Macau Tower, Mocha Inner Harbour, Mocha Golden Dragon, Mocha Altira, Mocha Kuong Fat and Mocha Hotel Taipa Square.

The ban was first introduced by the city’s Legislative Assembly on July 14, 2017. It was expected to go into effect as of January 1 of last year, but a grace period of a year was given for tableside smoking at VIP rooms. That period has now ended.