Social casino games is one of the most lucrative and fast-growing segments of gaming, and unlike online gambling where real money is wagered, social casinos only allow players to spend real money purchasing virtual casino chips which cannot be cashed out but may later, depending on the company, be...
October 20th, 2014 By Charles Washington
The American Gaming Association (AGA) prides itself on being the USA’s premier lobbying group for promoting and educating target audiences about the positive role commercial gambling plays in communities across the whole country. That support even extended to the issue of online gambling, but after coming under pressure from...
October 17th, 2014 By Adam Brown
Although online poker has always been regarded as a useful means of attracting new players to gambling sites and encouraging them to wager their funds on a variety of ‘house games,’ poker purists have often espoused the virtues of keeping the game of skill separate from casino-style games. Up...
October 16th, 2014 By Stephen Smith
The ‘Restoration of America´s Wire Act’ (RAWA) is expected to be debated in Congress’ during the forthcoming lame duck session (November 9-26) and if the bill is eventually passed into law all forms of online gambling will subsequently be prohibited, with the exception of internet pari-mutuel horse race betting...
October 15th, 2014 By Shane Larson
PokerStars, the world’s most popular online poker site, has been undergoing a number of significant changes over the past few months, not least a change of ownership following Amaya Gaming’s acquisition of its parent company the Rational Group on August 1st for $4.9 billion. Other major changes include PokerStars...
October 14th, 2014 By Charles Washington
At the start of October, the Amaya Gaming owned sites of PokerStars and Full Tilt Poker had both withdrawn their products from more than 30 countries across the world on a day labeled as “Black Tuesday”. The move is believed part of a wider policy by Amaya Gaming to...
October 10th, 2014 By Adam Brown
Phil Ivey has lost his high profile court case against Crockfords in London, after a High Court judge ruled the edge-sorting technique employed by Ivey to win £7.7 million ($12.4m) from the casino was “cheating for the purpose of civil law.” As judge John Edward Mitting, concluded: “He gave...
October 9th, 2014 By Stephen Smith
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