Online gambling
Millions of Americans continue to gamble online despite the ban

US House Committee votes on web gambling ban

H.R. 5767 reaches mark-up stage

Written by Clement James

The current ban on internet gambling is burdensome and doomed to fail

Jeffrey Sandman Safe and Secure Internet Gambling Initiative

The US House Committee on Financial Services is to vote on 24 June on whether to dissolve the controversial Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006.

The Committee has marked up legislation (H.R. 5767) that would prohibit the Department of the Treasury and Federal Reserve System from proposing, prescribing or implementing any regulations related to the current ban on internet gambling.

"Congress has studied this issue and heard from the financial services community and federal regulators that the current ban on internet gambling is burdensome and doomed to fail," said Jeffrey Sandman, a spokesman for the Safe and Secure Internet Gambling Initiative.

"Now it is time for Congress to change course and find a way to protect the millions of Americans that are continuing to gamble online."

H.R. 5767 was introduced by Barney Frank and Ron Paul in April after they claimed that "it was clear at the hearing that the regulations are unworkable for the financial services industry, and this bill would therefore prohibit their implementation".

Last year, Frank introduced the Internet Gambling Regulation and Enforcement Act (H.R. 2046) that would regulate web gambling.

The bill requires internet gambling operators licensed by the US Financial Crimes Enforcement Network to put in place safeguards to protect against underage and compulsive gambling.

It is also designed to ensure the integrity of financial transactions, while at the same time reinforcing the rights of states to control what, if any, level of internet gambling is permissible within their borders.

A tax revenue analysis prepared by PricewaterhouseCoopers suggests that taxation of regulated internet gambling is expected to generate between $8.7bn and $42.8bn in federal revenues during its first 10 years.

reader comments

related articles

GamblingEcommerce

EU takes on US over web gambling

European Commission in 'dramatic step' to settle trade dispute 02 Jun 2008

 

US attacked over web gambling ban

Proposed legislation under fire again 14 Apr 2008

Operators set for mobile entertainment bonanza

Mobile entertainment revenues to hit $47.5bn by 2010 14 Mar 2008

EC urges standards licensing cost disclosure

Competition Commissioner takes aim at Microsoft again 11 Jun 2008

US prepares for web gambling hearing

Banks have 'a lot of things to worry about' 10 Mar 2008

US attacked over web gambling ban

Proposed legislation under fire again 14 Apr 2008

US to make billions from web gambling laws

New legislation could generate $42.8bn over 10 years 06 Mar 2008

today's top stories

Analysis: The true cost of printing

Organisations need to get a better sense of how much they spend on printing before finding ways to reduce it 05 Sep 2008

Computing podcast 4 September 2008

Find out what Michael Dell told Computing, and listen to our take on the latest browser wars 04 Sep 2008

Looking to the future - exclusive Michael Dell interview

Dell's chief executive talks to Computing about the way the company continues to adapt to major changes in the industry 04 Sep 2008

Interview: Delivering power where it's needed at Betfair

The online gambling firm is putting its money on grid computing and virtualisation to underpin global expansion 04 Sep 2008

E-paper displays are an open book

A display revolution is on the way - but only once the user interface issues are solved 04 Sep 2008

Most commented stories

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Jobs

Related jobs

Job of the week

Job alerts

Sign up here

Find your next job

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

VPN, Extranet and Intranet Solutions

WAN/ LAN Solutions

Network Security

Interoperability-Connectivity

Grid/ Utility Computing

Latest poll

Would you use a mobile phone as an alternative to cash?

Would you use a mobile phone as an alternative to cash?

When mobile phones include inbuilt payment technology - would you use one instead of cash?

Previous poll results

Latest audio and video articles

BlackBerry BoldVideo

Video Review: BlackBerry Bold

Technology editor Daniel Robinson takes a hands-on look at the latest device from Research in Motion 01 Sep 2008

Podcast imageAudio

Computing podcast 4 September 2008

Find out what Michael Dell told Computing, and listen to our take on the latest browser wars 04 Sep 2008

Latest in-depth articles

A meetingAnalysis

Turning adversity into an advantage

IT chiefs under pressure to make cost cuts can turn the situation to their benefit 04 Sep 2008

CloudAnalysis

How to introduce cloud computing into your organisation

Best practice advice from Forrester Research 04 Sep 2008

Primary Navigation