Tag Archives: i-gaming

Confessions of a Poker Writer: The Self-Obsessed and Selfish World of Poker

Lee Davy continues his confessions series with an op-ed inspired by a 2+2 thread asking if poker players are especially self obsessed and selfish?

Whilst browsing 2+2 I read a thread called: Are Poker Players Especially Self-Obsessed and Selfish?

If that’s not worthy of a point of view I don’t know what is.

There are only a handful of poker players who have allowed me to peek under the hood. Most of them only show their shiny veneer. If you haven’t had a good look at the guts, it’s difficult to understand what makes a poker player tick. I am aware of the size of the sweeping arc my brush is about to make.

A lot of poker players are self-obsessed because they feel they need to be. If you want to be an outlier then you need to get 10,000 hours of practice in the books. You need to be self obsessed, you need to make sacrifices, and this means you have to be a little selfish.

There’s also the eternal search for sponsorship. Everybody has that dream. After Jason Somerville signed for PokerStars recently he said it was like the Holy Grail. These days, that comment could apply to any form of sponsorship. In a recent interview with Kristy Arnett she said, “It’s tough playing on your own dime.” She’s right. It’s one of the toughest aspects of professional poker.

Poker, especially tournament poker, is all about staying in the game. You know that if you stick around long enough you will eventually win that big score. You only hope that when it actually arrives it isn’t used to pay off your make up. This is why sponsorships are so important. They keep you in the game. You can spend your money on other important things like eating and paying rent.

Calling the Clock: Alex Dreyfus the Visionary, Jason Somerville the Future and Matas Cimbolas the Heater

In this week’s poker round-up Lee Davy reminds you that the American Poker Awards were the dogs bollocks, the World Series of Poker Circuit sets a new Maryland record before going international, the Grinder launches another business venture, Jason Somerville joins PokerStars as Twitch goes online poker mental, RAWA is postponed due to intense snowball fighting and much more.

Poker was a face of beauty this week. The man determined to ‘Sportify’ poker continued to scratch the necessary actions off his to-do-list by hosting the American Poker Awards (APA), and American Poker Conference (APC).

Nolan Dalla called it ‘one of the most exciting nights in poker’s history’, Alisson Hollander called it a ‘revolutionary change in the industry’, and Daniel Negreanu called Alexander Dreyfus a ‘visionary.’

It looked bloody amazing as well – all very Beverley Hills. Kara Scott held the conductors baton with the right blend of grace, humor and professionalism that you have come to expect from her, and nearly everyone turned up in person to collect their award.

A full list of the winners can be found right here.

A few interesting points came out of the inaugural APC. Adam Pliska told everyone that poker had become the third most viewed sport in the world. Mike Sexton said that poker was doing more for charity than any other sport in the world, and Alex Dreyfus told everyone that 2014 was the biggest year in live tournament history collecting over $1 billion in total buy-ins.

RAWA Postponed; Pennsylvania Bumping and Grinding

“Jobless Poker Player” Pleads Guilty to Card Marking

Mihai Lacatos, 61, has pleaded guilty to 18 different charges of fraud relating to a six year spree where he cheating UK casinos out of thousands of pounds using a technique known as ‘card marking.’

Life must be tough for casinos these days.

The ingenious trickery of the fraudsters is challenging the security standards of the casino industry like no time before.

Take 61-year old Mihai Lacatos for example. A criminal mastermind if there ever was one. The Daily Mail broke the story that Lacatos has been found guilty of cheating UK casinos out of thousands of pounds using an innovative technique known as ‘card marking.’

Card marking I hear you ask?

What’s card marking?

Brace yourself. It gets a whole lot more technical from hereon on.

Jason Koon and the Ruby Tuesday’s

Jason Koon delivers a Tuesday double whammy after taking down the Super Tuesday $1,000 buy-in event on PokerStars, before heading to Los Angeles and winning the $50,000 High Roller Turbo Six-Handed event at the World Poker Tour LA Poker Classic.

The Boomtown Rats didn’t like Monday’s.

The Rolling Stones missed their Ruby Tuesday’s.

I’ll stick with the Tuesday’s. I have always been more Stones than Rats. I think Jason Koon probably feels the same.

Whilst the chiseled jaw man mountain of muscle may be too young to remember either aforementioned giants of the UK music scene, he will have fresh memories of recent Tuesday’s when he felt on top of the mountains he often likes to climb before breakfast.

24 Feb 2015; Jason Koon, an American who is not allowed to play online poker in his home country because his country is a fucked up mess, travels to Canada to play in the $1,000 Super Tuesday on PokerStars.

I can hear the Muggles from here.

Paul Phua’s homesick son Darren to plead guilty to illegal betting if he can go home

Wei Seng ‘Paul’ Phua’s son Darren has reached a plea deal with federal prosecutors over illegal online betting charges filed last year.

On Thursday, the Las Vegas Review-Journal reported that US District Judge Andrew Gordon has set a hearing for 10am on Friday at which 23-year-old Darren Phua will plead guilty to a single misdemeanor charge of transmission of wagering information.

In exchange for his plea, Phua will be allowed to leave the country. The Malaysian-born Phua has been under house arrest in Las Vegas since last summer when he, his father and six other individuals were accused of running an illegal online sports betting operation out of three luxury villas at Caesars Palace.

The LVRJ’s sources said the homesick Phua has also agreed to forfeit $125k in cash plus electronic equipment seized during the July raid on the villas. Federal Bureau of Investigation agents that led the raid claim to have found incriminating text messages on Darren Phua’s phone indicating that Paul Phua had bribed Macau police to obtain his release following a major sports betting bust in Macau several weeks prior to the Vegas raid.

Darren’s plea leaves just his father still fighting the charges. Five of the other six defendants have already made their own deals with prosecutors while charges against another defendant were dropped. Darren is expected to receive the same five-year probationary sentence the other five plea-dealers received.

Paul Phua’s court date is set for April 13. The feds’ case against him was dealt a major blow last month when US Magistrate Judge Peggy Leen recommended tossing the bulk of the evidence the FBI had used to obtain their “fatally flawed” search warrants, which she said relied on “false and misleading statements.” Prosecutors, who previously stated that their case would be seriously jeopardized by their inability to use this evidence, are appealing Leen’s ruling.

The case has attracted mainstream media attention due to the tactics used by the FBI, who switched off internet service to the villas, then sent in agents disguised as tech support equipped with hidden body cameras. Civil liberty watchdogs have criticized these tactics as a violation of Fourth Amendment protections against unreasonable search and seizure.

New Jersey residents souring on sports betting, casinos outside Atlantic City

New Jersey’s quest for legal sports betting appears to be souring state residents on the concept, according to a new survey.

A Fairleigh Dickinson University PublicMind poll of 901 New Jersey adults found 50% were in favor of repealing the federal PASPA sports betting prohibition. That’s down from 55% in a similar poll conducted in October 2013. Over the same period, the number that opposes such a plan has risen from 28% to 41%.

It should be noted that the most recent poll question addressed the notion of a federal repeal while the 2013 poll merely asked whether residents were in favor of the state pursuing its own legal wagering regime. Fairleigh Dickinson suggested the mention of the federal government may have “tempered” support.

Support for overturning PASPA was strongest among office pool bettors, who were almost 70% in favor. Support was also much stronger with men (59%) than with women (42%).

For those who believe PASPA should be overturned, the extra revenue the state would generate was the prime motivator at 51%, while libertarian impulses were cited by 30%. As for those opposed, 47% believe legal sports betting will increase gambling addiction while 25% said professional sport would be corrupted.

The advocates appealing the most recent injunction against New Jersey’s sports betting legislation will deliver oral arguments to a three-judge panel of the Third Circuit Court of Appeals on March 17. New Jersey’s hired legal gun Ted Olson has been granted 13 of the 15 minutes the state’s advocates have been allotted. Attorneys for state legislators and the thoroughbred horsemen’s association will get just one minute apiece. (About long enough to say “What he said, your honors.”)

The same PublicMind survey found less support for expanding casino gambling beyond Atlantic City’s borders. Last year saw increasing talk of allowing casinos to be built in other areas of the state, including the Meadowlands racetrack in East Rutherford. A July 2014 PublicMind survey found 42% of respondents were in favor of allowing gambling outside AC but that support fell to 36% in the most recent survey.

Ireland online betting tax to begin mid-year; senator fears online “lotto zombies”

Ireland-facing online gambling operators will start paying the new online betting tax this year after legislators finally approved their oft-delayed legislation.

On Thursday, Irish finance minister Michael Noonan said the Betting (Amendment) Bill had been sent to President Michael Higgins for signing, marking the culmination of a torturous process that began way back in 2011. The new regime will extend the 1% tax on betting turnover currently paid by retail bookmakers to online sportsbooks, while online betting exchanges like Betfair will pay 15% tax on betting profits.

Operators who wish to continue serving Irish punters must now apply for Irish online betting licenses. Reuters quoted a finance ministry spokesperson saying that the tax would likely take effect by the middle of this year. Had the tax been applied in 2014, Irish bookie Paddy Power believes their earnings would have been reduced by €8m.

ONLINE LOTTO JUNKIES RAVAGING IRELAND

In other Irish political news, Fine Gael senator Paul Coghlan made waves this week by warning that technical glitches in National Lottery terminals could spark an epidemic of “online Lotto junkies.” The retail terminals have experienced a few hiccups in recent weeks, leading to the postponement of one lottery draw and considerable punter frustration.

On Wednesday, Coghlan warned that the technical hiccups would “drive Lotto players away from ticket terminals in shops toward the online environment.” Coghlan reminded his fellow senators that the National Lottery believed there was “huge potential in growing the online sales channel.” Coghlan demanded lottery operators provide assurances that they will “introduce controls” to avoid the aforementioned Lotto junkies from overdosing on their online fix.

Ireland’s National Lottery allows online players to spend up to €75 per day, while player accounts can contain a balance of up to €750. Coghlan called these sums “inordinate amounts of money” for people to be spending on a state-owned (Intralot-operated) gambling outlet. A lottery spokesperson pointed out that the €75 limit was lower than many other countries, including the UK.

Betfair shares top £21 as Q3 earnings fend off point-of-consumption tax

Exchange betting specialists Betfair saw its shares rise nearly 18% on Thursday after posting better than expected fiscal Q3 results.

For the three months ending Jan. 31, Betfair revenue rose 20% to £114.6m, the fourth consecutive quarter of double-digit growth. Earnings rose 17% to £23.6m, despite a £7m hit from the UK’s new 15% online point-of-consumption tax, which kicked in Dec. 1.

Betfair CEO Breon Corcoran (pictured) said the company had “momentum” and was focused on finishing its fiscal year strongly. Previous full-year fiscal 2015 earnings estimates were in the range of £97m to £103m but Betfair now expects the numbers to come in between £113m and £118m.

Sports betting revenue was up 16% to £76.7m, driven by a strong mobile performance. Four of five Betfair sports bettors are now using the company’s mobile channel, resulting in a 96% growth in mobile betting revenue.

Mobile also helped drive a 30% rise in gaming revenue to £24.1m. Betfair notched a first in January, during which mobile bettors accounted for the majority of gaming revenue. Gaming revenue also benefited from better cross-sell with sports bettors.

Betfair US revenue rose 30% to £13.5m, spurred by a 17% gain in horseracing operation TVG. Betfair has greater expectations for its US division following last month’s acquisition of the HRTV network from the Stronach Group. Betfair didn’t break out separate revenue stats for its New Jersey online casino product.

Revenue from ‘sustainable’ aka the regulated markets of UK, Ireland, USA, Italy, Denmark, Malta, Spain and Bulgaria was up 27% to £92.9m, while revenue from other markets fell 2% to £21.7m. Active customer ranks in sustainable markets rose 50% while other markets fell 11%.

Ladbrokes has high hopes for UK Election betting; BetVictor aims to boost non-football bets

Election prop betting isn’t as big as its sports counterpart, but bookmaker Ladbrokes expects the forthcoming UK elections to be the biggest betting elections in history. That might seem wishful thinking, but the company’s head of political betting, Matthew Shaddick, believes that bettors are going to spend in excess of £100 million in this election.

Should Shaddick’s estimate prove to be right, it would represent a quantum leap from the amount of money bookmakers took in during the last election in 2010. “We are pretty sure it’s going to be the biggest betting election, probably two or three times as big as we saw in 2010,” Shaddick said.

Certain areas and pockets in the UK are also tipped to be more active with betting on the election, specifically the seat in Kent where candidates Nigel Farage and Al Murray are locked in a heated battle that could go in any direction with the Labour and Tories also in the mix.

The Ukip leader is still considered the favorite at 1/3, but other contenders like the Tories (3/1) and Labour (8/1) both not far behind.

Meanwhile, BetVictor brings back an old friend to star in its new TV campaign to boost its non-football bet offering. The firm’s betting mascot, Maurice, has been tasked to headline three TV adverts created by creative agency VCCP.

“Our Maurice character has quickly become one of the most instantly recognizable advert stars on TV today and Maurice in the hot seat provides us with a platform to communicate to the wider betting audience, across the many sports set to dominate the British spring and summer,” BetVictor Chief Marketing Officer Anton Bell said in a statement.

The adverts, which will focus on one specific sport—horse racing, tennis, and cricket, are created to encourage bettors to bet on these sports in addition to the always popular bets on football. The first ad, called Jockey, was launched earlier this week to help promote BetVictor’s horse racing offerings as the countdown to the annual Cheltenham Festival begins.

Bringing Recreational Players into the Game of Poker

This is a guest contribution by Steven Miller President of Card Shark Media Inc. If you would like to submit a contribution please contact Bill Beatty for submission details. Thank you.

First of all, I’d like to express my thanks to Alex Dreyfus and his team for organizing the 1st annual American Poker Awards that were held last week in Los Angeles. This was truly a special event that promises to bring online and brick & mortar operators, media, poker communities and content providers, and professional and recreational players into a unified and vibrant global industry.

A recurring theme mentioned by both professional players and poker room managers was the critical importance of bringing new recreational players into the game. There was a discussion of interpretation of tournament rules that gives the benefit of the doubt to recreational players when found to be in technical violation of sometimes arcane rules. There was a discussion of the flattening of the WSOP Main Event payout structure to give as many as 300 more players the opportunity to cash in what probably will be remembered by many as a lifetime bucket list event.

And one, poker room executive, Mr. Adam Altwies of the Aria Resort and Casino, told a story about an interview with poker pro Shaun Deeb, who after playing in a WSOP event, described a hand he played using a gibberish-like vernacular that could only be understood by a tiny percentage of the world’s 150 million poker players. Mr. Altwies’ advice to Shaun was to tell his story in plain English!

This reminds me of a tweet written by another poker pro, Andy Frankenberger. Here’s how it went:

“@AMFrankenberger: Then UTG 3300, call, I call btw w 22, BB call. Flop 245 dd. UTG 10k, me 20K, BB 50k(puke), fold. I tank/shove/pray. Him A3. Riv 4!”

Huh?

Becky’s Affiliated: Jim Ryan on Pala Interactive and the state of US regulated real money gaming

Jim Ryan is a familiar face in the iGaming industry and also an influencer, having worked in the marketplace since 2001 in C-level positions. Ryan is currently serving as the CEO of Pala Interactive, a gaming technology provider with a focus on US regulated real money iGaming.  Pala Interactive is the first tribal entity to receive a real money iGaming licence in the state of New Jersey and the company has big plans for California’s market once it opens up.

I had the opportunity to sit down with Ryan, one of my favorite executives in the iGaming space, to chat about Pala Interactive’s performance in New Jersey, his view on bad actor and tainted asset issues, how PokerStars’ imminent New Jersey license will impact his business, the state of regulation in California and the his opinion on the threat of Sheldon Adelson and RAWA.

Becky Liggero: Lets start with New Jersey.  A lot of people are disappointed in the performance of the New Jersey market so far- from your perspective, how are things going with Pala Interactive since you’ve entered the market in New Jersey?

Jim Ryan: From our perspective its been all good.  But we approached New Jersey, I think, with a very different viewpoint than others.  If you take a look at the facts, we entered the market a year late.  We entered the market without a known brand in the state of New Jersey, we’ve also entered that market without a database.  In one respect, one could look at this as us being disadvantaged.   In another respect, we actually see this as a great opportunity for us.

We went into New Jersey with three very specific objectives:

First, being a new enterprise, we wanted to expose ourselves to a regulatory process.  So having the company, its management team and its product go through that process, being vetted, positioning us not only for New Jersey but for other regulated US markets as they open up, fit perfectly with our strategy, which by the way, is to operate in US regulated, real money gaming environments.

The second reason why we thought New Jersey was well placed for us was that we had built a brand new technology platform, probably the only platform out there that was built specifically to operate in the US regulated market. Actually we built much of the platform with the New Jersey regulations in hand.  But its one thing to run that platform in a lab and it’s a whole other thing to expose it to the marketplace.  And we’ve done that for the last three months and learned an awful lot of things about the good, the bad and the ugly with our platform and we’re actually this week about to do our first major release which is going to optimize the product significantly, from the player journey perspective, from a conversion perspective.  We’re adding 28 new games to the platform this week which will take us well above 120 games, I think one of the largest in the marketplace.

SEO Tip of the Week: Onsite Trust Optimisation – New content with real content date markers

90 Digital CEO Nick Garner talks about another part of Trust Optimisation, and the most important is that you have a Fresh New Content on the site and have a Real Date Markers in this edition of CalvinAyre.com’s SEO Tip of the Week.

Short intro to Trust Optimization.

Along with on site optimization and link acquisition, there seems to be a third element to ranking well on Google, it’s called Trust Optimization. Trust Optimization is based on the information we have got from anecdotal evidence on click through rates and rankings along with explicit guidelines from Google stating what they are looking for in a trusted website.

On with the post…

Following on from making sure your site is properly maintained, it makes sense that users will trust you more if they see a steady flow of new content on your website. Course there are some sites which will forever be static, but on the whole most sites should have fresh content to show that it is well maintained and keeping up with the times.

Since google has to rely on what it says on the page, date markers are really important.

This is a date marker:

Bet365 braces for start of Australian trial; younger Aussies giving up the gamble

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) lawsuit against online gambling operator Bet365 is set to begin this month.

Last August, the ACCC accused Bet365’s Aussie operations of making “misleading representations” in their bonus offers to punters. Specifically, the ACCC cited a free bet and deposit bonus of $200 that came with rollover requirements.

The ACCC says these requirements weren’t made sufficiently clear and thus the promotion violated consumer law. The ACCC is asking the Federal Court of Australia to award it declarations, injunctions, pecuniary penalties, corrective advertising, a compliance program and costs. (Partridge in a pear tree to be delivered next Christmas.)

The Australian Broadcasting Company quoted Bet365 senior counsel Cameron Moore saying the company wanted to nail down the specific nature of the allegations before trial commenced. The ACCC has previously acknowledged that the Northern Territory-licensed Bet365 amended its promotions after being contacted by the ACCC.

YOUNGER AUSSIES GIVING UP THE GAMBLE

Studies of the global gaming market usually place Australia at the top in per capita spending on gambling but new data suggests younger generations are choosing a different path than their elders.

Roy Morgan Research decided to study the gambling habits of Generation Z, which is defined as Aussies born between 1991 and 2005 (although the study only concerned itself with the 18+ members). The average Australian spent $13 per week on gambling, 9% of his or her weekly entertainment budget. But Generation Z spent just $4 on gambling, representing 3% of their budget.

The WSOP Breaking Records in Maryland

A World Series of Poker Circuit event at the Horseshoe Baltimore has smashed the record for a live tournament, in Maryland, after Jesse Mills defeated 2,403 entrants on his way to victory.

[Image Credit: PokerNews]

If you listen hard enough, your customers will tell you what they want.

The World Series of Poker Circuit (WSOPC) is proving to be a very efficient conduit in that regard. It’s been a record-breaking year for the series, and it keeps getting better.

The Season 11 stop at the Horseshoe Baltimore in Maryland has smashed  the record for a land-based live poker tournament, in the state, and they have only played through two of the 12 gold ring events that are going to be on show.

2,403 players ponied up the $365 buy-in, and in some cases even more, in Event #2 $365 No-Limit Hold’em (NLHE) Re-Entry. The players eagerness to fire off consecutive bullets created a total prize pool of $720,900 and $106,305 of that now rests in the piggy bank of Jesse Mills.

Talking to the WSOP, after the event, Mills said that his key to success was avoiding tougher players, and folding big hands when he wasn’t sure how to proceed.

Sweden yanks gambling apps; Finland won’t prosecute online gamblers

Sweden’s gaming regulator has succeeded in convincing Apple to remove several online gambling apps from the Swedish-facing App Store.

Apps linked to 888, Betfair, Bet365, Betsson, PokerStars, William Hill, Unibet and others were unceremoniously yanked from view late last month following a complaint filed by the Lotteriinspektionen (Swedish Gaming Board).

A Lotteriinspektionen spokesperson told eGaming Review the complaint wasn’t actually a complaint, but merely an “informative letter” that sought to “verify the terms and conditions” of Apple’s gambling policy. You know, like how Anna Sage didn’t really rat out John Dillinger, she just thought FBI agent Melvin Purvis would like the movie playing at the Biograph Theater that night.

Some of the affected operators are reportedly discussing the matter with Apple in the hope of persuading the tech giant that Sweden’s suspect gaming laws don’t justify the apps’ removal. Apple recently reinstated a number of gambling apps that had been pulled from the UK App Store following what was dubbed an “admin error.”

Sweden’s offending apps vanished just weeks after the government announced that the long awaited revamp of its online betting regime had been postponed until some unspecified future date. The European Union’s top court has ordered Sweden to justify the online betting monopoly of state-owned operator Svenska Spel but Sweden appears to be thinking the problem will go away if it just thinks happy thoughts and pours another shot of Absolut Denial.

FINLAND WON’T PROSECUTE PLAYERS WHO VISIT INTERNATIONAL SITES

Similar concerns of online gambling firms poaching from local monopolies are being voiced across the border in Finland. Finland’s four authorized operators – RAY (slots), Veikkaus (lotteries), Fintoto (horseracing) and PAF’s monopoly in the autonomous Aland islands – generate annual revenue of €1.7b. That dwarfs the estimated €130m spent with international online firms, but concerns are that this gap is shrinking.

Josh Turner Triumphs at WSOPC St Louis

Josh Turner has defeated Javier Zarco, in heads-up action, to take the first prize of $136,945 in a bumper field at the World Series of Poker Circuit $1,675 Main Event at the Lumiere Place Casino and Hotel in St Louis.

Josh Turner has gone wire-to-wire in the $1,675 World Series of Poker Circuit Main Event at Lumiere Place Casino and Hotel in St Louis, Missouri.

[Image Credit: Bluff.com]

He dominated the first day of action, finishing with 400,500 chips – almost half as many as the player in second place. When he finished Day 2 he was the man heading to the final table as the chip leader, and he finished the last day with every single chip in the competition.

It’s been an outstanding year for the local lad from St. Louis. This victory was his 11th cash of the season, his seventh final table, and his second gold ring. However, despite all the accolades, this marked his first deep run in a WSOPC Main Event, and the $136,945 is the largest score of his career.

415 entrants created a total prize pool of $622,500. It was a fairly inexperienced final table with only Jesse Watson having any significant form of note, after winning a ring earlier in the season when he beat 187 players in a six-handed No-Limit Hold’em (NLHE) event for $15,428.

It’s not often that you see a Spaniard involved in the WSOPC, but Javier Zarco was a serious contender in this one. According to WSOP reports he pushed Turner all the way, and could easily have walked away from St. Louis wearing the gold ring.

Kristy Arnett: Zen and the Art of Surviving a Tough First Year in Professional Poker

Kristy Arnett: Zen and the Art of Surviving a Tough First Year in Professional Poker Video

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Webis to shut Betinternet fixed-odds division, focus on WatchandWager

AIM-listed online gambling operator Webis Holdings has announced it will shut its Betinternet fixed-odds sports betting product effective 10am GMT on Thursday (5).

On Tuesday, Webis announced it had decided to shutter Betinternet after regulatory changes in certain Asian markets made business untenable. Webis said it had attempted to flog Betinternet to rival firms but received no firm offers, sealing Betinternet’s fate.

Last summer, Webis had reported that Betinternet was struggling with “external challenges,” including action by the government in Singapore that forced Webis to “curtail” Betinternet’s operations in the city-state. That door was permanently shut after Singapore’s new Remote Gambling Act took effect on Feb. 2.

Betinternet had been an internet fixture for 15 years but the “ongoing development of jurisdictional protectionism for fixed-odds operations by either prohibition or onerous regulatory and levy requirements means that Betinternet.com has little chance of maintaining further profitability as operational expenses increase.”

Betinternet customers have been told to withdraw their balances within 90 days of the closure date after which the balances will be “set to zero.” However, unresolved sports bets will be settled as the results come in, and players will have 90 days from the date of those results to withdraw their winnings.

Webis now intends to focus on its San Francisco-based WatchandWager advance deposit wagering operation. In FY 2014, WatchandWager turnover rose 24% to $124.5m, two-thirds of which came from its Cal Expo racetrack in California. Turnover in Asia and Europe was up 9% and 237% respectively after the company inked deals with the Hong Kong Jockey Club and the Swedish Horse Racing Totalisator Board.

Las Vegas Sands wins trademark infringement suit against First Cagayan

A US federal judge is considering imposing sanctions on casino operator Las Vegas Sands for redacting data from documents related to the wrongful termination suit of former Sands China president Steve Jacobs.

The Jacobs v. Sands legal fight has been going on since 2010 and has expanded to include numerous defamation suits related to the two parties’ public sniping. On Tuesday, US District Judge Elizabeth Gonzalez heard arguments from both sides as to what punishment Sands should receive for redacting personal information from around 7,900 documents related to the case.

Sands had originally claimed the documents sought by Jacobs couldn’t be removed from Macau due to the special administrative region’s Personal Data Protection Act. Sands was later found to have already exported the same data to its attorneys in Las Vegas, a revelation that prompted Gonzalez to fine Sands $25k. Sands was also ordered to turn over the documents to Jacobs’ attorneys, which is when the redactions came to light.

On Tuesday, Sands attorneys argued that they had no choice but to redact the personal info lest they upset Macau authorities. Jacobs’ attorney Todd Bice noted that the redaction process had cost Sands China around $2.4m, which he claimed demonstrated the futility of assessing purely monetary sanctions. Given Las Vegas Sands’ resources, Bice said the company’s intention was to “spend us all into the grave.” Gonzalez said she would issue a ruling early next week.

MORE ASIAN INFRINGERS TOLD TO PAY UP

Meanwhile, Sands has won another intellectual property infringement judgment against Asian online gambling sites, although collecting on that judgment will be a more difficult endeavor.

In March 2014, Sands sued First Cagayan Leisure & Resort Corporation, Wann Yichen, Qing Wan Leng and the unknown registrants of 54 online gambling websites, most of which boasted generic numbered domains linked by a directory site. Sands accused the sites of making liberal and unauthorized use of the Sands name, logo and other intellectual property.