Nevada Lawmakers Nearer To OK'ing Net Betting 102
jyuter writes: "Nevada has approved in theory to license on-line gambling sites. It will probably take a while for them to actually start licensing since they need (among other things) "resonable assurences" that the vendors can prohibit minors. One lawyer even suggested "biometrics" or a fingerprint scan to detect minors, or GPS to determine if the person playing is in a legal state." The word "spoof" keeps hurling itself across my line of sight. (Should the state get to charge people $500,000 every two years for operating a business without toxic waste? Talk about a barrier to entry!)
Re:Bad for compulsive gamblers (Score:1)
Having said that, I could really care less if this goes through. I'm not a gambler, I seriously doubt this will make me a gambler. My point really was just that to "avoid those sites" for a gambeling addict presents different logistical situations for most people.
SHould the state... (Score:1)
Sure... how about state costs for in-state gambling addicts, state costs for any lawsuits such a law could entail, etc.
Depending on your point of view, both of these involve "toxic waste", if you think that addicts in general are weak and deserve their self-imposed fate, or that lawsuits only really benefit lawyers and/or their results can generate "toxic waste" in a metaphorical legal sense...
Re:$500,000 fees (Score:2)
I don't doubt for one moment that the mafia runs the games, or that the regulators know that. My take on it is that the legal, fair games are nevertheless so profitable that the mafia wants in. It's really quite clever; they've created a way for dishonest greedy people to make money legally and honestly. I really miss living in Nevada...they have a great attitude there.
They're gone (Score:2)
The mob is gone. Oh, there are a couple of old mob figures around, but they're impotent these days. They just weren't able to survive the publicly traded casino--it has no kneecaps to break, etc. This weakened them enough that gaming control was able to mop up.
These days, they're only around as comic relief--the occasional news story as some 70 year old hobbles up to another's driveway, leaning on a cane with one hand while shooting with another, over some slight from the past.
while I'm at it, this is a bad idea. Las Vegas is *not* in the gambling business. It's in the fantasy business; gaming is just part of the fantasy. You step off the plane and enter an alternate world for 2 days, a week, or whatever. Destination gambling is fundamentally different than local gambling, which is predatory in nature.
hawk
Re:Fingerprint scans to detect minors ?? (Score:1)
I was suspecting something along the lines of your dirty fingers joke--they would do it based on fingerprint size. But clearly there are adults with small fingers and children with big fingers, so that couldn't be all that useful. In the end, I think some people were thinking of gee-whiz technology that really offers no solution.
Re:gambling not bad (Score:2)
>few hours of fun at the blackjack table
My goodness, you must be a good player, and lucky! Last time I was in a casino, $40 would
have played TWO HANDS of blackjack.
I couldn't believe the $20 and $50 minimums at tables, and that there were no $5 tables!
This was at a riverboat in Mississippi, but
I've seen a similar in Shreveport. I realize
if you live in Vegas you can still find $2.00
blackjack. I live in AZ but haven't checked out
the Indian casinos.
I don't care much for gambling places. I like the games themselves, but I don't like the depressingly mundane (yet garish) surroundings.
The "entertainment" in those places is always
meant to appeal to one or two previous generations.
Net Gambling... (Score:3)
I'm on my third DSL provider.
Re:Good for Nevada! (Score:1)
And I'd stand in line to buy a (second) USB hub.
This also promises to add new meaning to the term 'daisychaining'.
I'll bet... (Score:4)
Whaddya say, moderators? C'mon, eleven!
:)
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Re:gambling not bad (Score:1)
Millions of people all over the US do exactly this every week on odds that are significantly worse.
It's called the lottery.
(and most casino gambling games have odds far better than 100,000:1. the odds of being dealt a straight flush in five-card stud (or the first round of cards in five-card draw) poker are only about 65,000:1, and that's a phenomonal hand)
-LjM
Re:I'll bet... (Score:1)
Heh heh. Everyone remember: You're not a whore if you do it for FUN! The karma is just a side-benefit.
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Re:Good for Nevada! (Score:1)
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Re:I'll bet... (Score:1)
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a suggestion... (Score:1)
If you think you know what the hell is going on you're probably full of shit. -- Robert Anton Wilson
Toxic waste? (Score:2)
Well, they haven't been able to get the online buffets working properly...
From what I recall.. (Score:2)
Why it's good. (Score:2)
There is already a *large* international online gambling market. The only thing *any* jurisdiction gets out of not permittiong 'online' gambling in their state/country is to force prospective businesses to leave the country to somewhere they can run their business legally.
It makes it makes it no easier or harder for someone to gamble online. It's just as convenient for you to gamble online now as it would be if Vegas was doing it.
Nevada not just for porn anymore. (Score:1)
It seems that the majority of live adult sites in the US orginate out of NV.
An extra thought: If prostitution is legal employment in NV, could the state force wellfare mothers into prostitution if they couldn't find some other form of employment?
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Re:gambling not bad (Score:1)
Gambling is good! - This message brought to you by teachers whose salaries and future pay raises are tied gambling taxes.
Re:gambling not bad (Score:1)
This is a good thing...or at least not that bad. (Score:2)
The big problem right now is that it's difficult for the common man to tell which of the online "casinos" are truly credible. Most of the casinos are in off-shore havens (Carribean, Central America), and there's no effective way to tell if you've been cheated. (Sorry sir, back luck on drawing that virtual 5 of spades!) On top of all of that, many people have reported problems getting payouts from certain organizations. If you lose, your credit card is debited. If you win, you may or may not see a check in three to four weeks.
The point of all of this is that Nevada gambling would at the least be regulated, accredited, and relatively trustworthy. There's so much money to be made from legal forms of gambling that none of the big players would risk their license over trying to cheat.
Is online gambling an evil? Maybe. But Nevada online gambling is a lesser evil.
Re:I can't see this as being a Good Thing (tm) (Score:2)
Ney-va-tha with the "th" said with a lisp.
If you speak Spanish that is.
Last time I checked.. (Score:1)
Re:gambling not bad (Score:1)
Gambling can be very wholesome fun especially if you love losing money. You're more likely to be hit by a run away truck who's driver broke out of a federal state prison on a military base, than to win gambling in casinos.
Re:gambling not bad (Score:1)
Actually, he did. "What are the green squares for?" was replied with an example along the lines of "Suppose you doubled your bet with every spin of the roulette wheel (and there were no green squares), every time you lost. You'd be guaranteed to win. The problem is that if you double your bet every time, you've gotta have more money than I [Dad, playing the house] do. The green squares make sure that even a guy with a million bucks can't try this."
Of course, we did it out with pen and paper and "real numbers" ($2, $4, $8, $16...) instead of exponents, but the effect was the same.
Re:gambling not bad (Score:2)
Amen.
Actually, I have fond memories of my Dad teaching me (at age 7-8) how to play poker, blackjack, and roulette.
After spending some time taking my pennies, we both noticed that he was doing well, and so he started teaching me why the house always won. "Daddy, what are the green numbers on the roulette wheel for?" is actually a pretty natural question for a seven-year-old.
So we switched sides, and I played the "house" in blackjack and roulette the next time. All of a sudden, my "luck" changed and I "won" my pennies back. And he taught me that luck had nothing to do with it. If you play enough hands and have an advantage, you will win. And the rules are set up so that the house has an advantage.
Was it real probability theory? Not really. But when a kid's just discovered fractions, it's pretty easy to show him that 18/38 is less than 18/36. If betting on black/red is like flipping a coin, it's a fair game. Except that two out of every 38 spins, the coin is designed to land on its edge.
Since then, I've gone to casinos and had plenty of fun. But I've always gone in with cash, and with the notion that my $40 in gambling money is purchasing me a few hours of fun at the blackjack table - in the same way that the same $40 could purchase me few hours of fun in a bar, at the movies, or at the arcade.
Re:Awright, online blackjack! (Score:2)
But the computer said there was! ;-)
Actually, I was aiming for (+1, Funny), but someone could get an easy (+1, Insightful) by pointing out that what I just described as "preposterous, who'd be dumb enough to play cards when you can't see the cards being dealt and you don't have the source code of the algorithm that deals the cards?" is exactly what players of VLTs (Video Lottery Terminals) and electronic slot machines are doing right now in the real world.
Re:$500,000 fees (Score:2)
Hey, what's wrong with the mob?
Compare the payouts on the mob-run "numbers game" in with the payout ratio of the government-run lotteries. The mob offers better odds, according to what appears to be expert testimony on the subject:
SOURCE: Q&A session on the National Gambling Impact Survey [ngisc.gov], March 17, 1998
Given the choice, it looks like the mob offers a superior product in the gambling market. Which reminds me, both the government and the Mafia have programmes whereby they offer "protection" you didn't ask for in exchange for "protection money" you have to pay. Both have the power to see that Bad Things Happen to you if you don't pay up. What's the difference, really? (There are days when I think the only reason the government fights organized crime is because it can't stand the competitionRe:gambling not bad (Score:2)
(Yeah, it was Reno, and they had a $5 table. I could hack a $20 minimum with $100 to play with, but anything beyond that is out of my league. It stops being fun when it's about real money. If I wanna do that, I'll play the stock market :)
> I like the games themselves, but I don't like the depressingly mundane (yet garish) surroundings. The "entertainment" in those places is always meant to appeal to one or two previous generations
You have a gift for understatement :)
Awright, online blackjack! (Score:5)
Four of Hearts, Seven of Clubs.
Dealer is showing:
Unknown card, Six of Diamonds
Will you: Hit, Stand, or Double-down?
(Double-down)
Host: dealer.casino.nv.us contacted...
18K read (at 943 bytes/sec)
Player draws: Twelve of Clubs.
Player has: Four of Hearts, Seven of Clubs, Twelve of Clubs. Total=22.
Player Busts.
Dealer draws: Ace of Hearts.
Dealer stands.
Dealer turns over unknown card: Four of Clubs.
Dealer has: Four of Clubs, Six of Diamonds, Nine of Hearts. Total=21.
Dealer wins.
Wager again? Yes/No.
("Aaw, shit, again?!?!?! I always draw a twelve when I'm winning!")
Re:$500,000 fees (Score:2)
Actually, there are several differences. The Mafia doesn't insist on knowing every detail of my finances, as long as they get paid. The Mafia doesn't care what chemicals I may choose to ingest in private. And I don't think even the Mafia could pull off as huge a pyramid scheme as Social Security.
Re:Bad for compulsive gamblers (Score:1)
$500,000 fees (Score:1)
Yes... It takes alot of money for the government to regulate that industry, and there is alot of potential for people to be riped off if the government doesnt keep it fair.
Re:Bad for compulsive gamblers (Score:1)
Re:will they Block network trafic ? (Score:1)
If I'm in a resident of one state, but currently away on a trip in another, whose law applies? Would the strictest rule apply -- and more importantly, how would the Nevadans know my *physical* location without, say, a court order for ISP logs?
Interstate gambling would be interstate commerce. I'm pretty sure that the Feds believe they have jurisdiction over this, and they could make a strong case because gambling *is* commerce. And for now, the Feds are saying "no" to the whole shebang.
Re:I can't see this as being a Good Thing (tm) (Score:1)
For comparison, if memory serves the House percentage on a standard 38-number roulette wheel is only 5.26% on the "best" bet (from the bettor's point of view), betting on a single number at 35:1 odds. A slot machine -- hrm, some are around 11% and probably upwards.
Prophecy Markets (Score:1)
"spoof" is reaching popular culture (Score:2)
Packet sniffing seems to be making its way around as well, and is equally misunderstood. Maybe it's the familiarity with words like "spoof" or "sniff" that's helping them make the rounds, but either way it's getting annoying.
Re:"spoof" is reaching popular culture (Score:2)
and yes, you are misinterpreting
8th grade graduation was indeed very nice, and one of my fondest memories -- getting out for summer vacation, heading home, getting into a little 12' brockway skiff and cruising through the saltwater creeks... it was almost as nice as when i got my bachelor's, although it certainly didn't do me as well in the job market
Re:I'll bet... (Score:1)
Moderators?
WTF just happened here?
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Underage gambling? (Score:2)
Ok, so you have biometrics. Get a piece of tape, take your parent's fingerprint off their cereal bowl. Big deal.
The point is, the net affords a certain level of anonyminity to its users, and no matter what protection measures they implement, there's no way to stop everything.
This is asking for some BIG legal battles.
Re:Underage gambling? (Score:2)
Re:Bad for compulsive gamblers (Score:1)
Too bad for them. Maybe they could learn some self control.
Re:Bad for compulsive gamblers (Score:1)
Those people are throwing all their money away gambling for the same reason that they are poor. Be it unintelligence, irresponsibility, mental illness, or other problems. They no more deserve to be "protected" from the chance to gamble than they deserve to have high-paying jobs despite their lack of skill/dedication/responsibility
Re:Access from other states (Score:1)
Because they don't want the feds fucking with their cash cow.
Found $500,000 in couch... (Score:3)
Re:Bad for compulsive gamblers (Score:1)
It could take those who currently gamble for fun and make them become addicted. But that's simply a personal restraint issue. We all know better, but few of us care enough to restrain ourselves. If they truly want to become addicted then it does not require on-line gambling to do it.
Re:Bad for compulsive gamblers (Score:1)
I still think there are ways to circumvent this, though. Put a sign on your monitor that says "No Gambling". Avoid web sites that have gambling adverts (I know, hard to do). Use your computer for a specific purpose (play Starcraft, code, make a web page, do the family finances) not random entertainment (surf the web).
Bad for compulsive gamblers (Score:2)
Re:Bad for compulsive gamblers (Score:2)
It's not about those who want to gamble, it's for those who want to stop. Most can manage not to go to a casino, but with billions of banner ads saying "clink here to gamble", it's going to be a lot harder for these people not to gamble. If it takes you 30 minutes to drive to a casino, you've got plenty of time to reason to turn back, but if all it takes is two clicks, it becomes a lot harder.
Re:Bad for compulsive gamblers (Score:3)
The second important differences is the implications. If you smoke, you're mainly hurting yourself (sure there's secondary smoke, but it's not that important). If you're addicted to gambling, you're hurting your whole family (as in losing your house,
Gambling online... (Score:3)
Nevada already has such a favourable tax climate for business due to the casinos that the relocation of would-be online betting parlours to the state could have a very beneficial effect on the existing, non-betting-oriented businesses, particularly in booming Clark County (home to Las Vegas and Henderson, the fastest-growing collection of ugly tract homes in the world).
The question is not whether Nevada will legalise online gambling, but whether this legality will stand when the inevitable challenges happen in Federal court.
As for minors getting in to online gambling illicitly... the way most casinos are set up now could be used as a model:
If nothing else, they could use an age verification system as they do on porn sites.
OTOH, 13-year-olds with too much time and money on their hands vs. the authorities and their slow reactions, especially programmatic reactions...'tis no contest whatsoever.
Zaphod B
Re:Not me, pally. (Score:2)
Ever heard of video poker?
just on CNBC also (Score:2)
Re:Underage gambling? (Score:1)
Dude. You watch WAY to much TV.
Re:Good for Nevada! (Score:1)
Re:Awright, online blackjack! (Score:2)
Re:just on CNBC also (Score:1)
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Re:Last time I checked.. (Score:1)
Are you saying that verifying via GPS is not technically feasible (cannot be done because the technology does not exist) or that it is too much hassle for the users/administrators?
Addressing your desire to gamble online while not in a legal state, that would be the whole purpose of incorporating GPS into the authentication solution. Even though you might reside in Nevada, you cannot legally gamble while traveling in a different state. The Federal Interstate Commerce laws declare that interstate wire gambling is illegal. GPS can be used (and should be) by the online gambling sites to prevent illeagal access by "out of towners".
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Re:Licnse? (Score:2)
For an online sports betting page to be legally operating in Nevada, they must be able to prove to the gaming commission that all bets placed on their site originated from with the state of Nevada.
Other states that wish to implement online casinos, sports betting, etc. have the same burden of proof. They must be able to show that an online wager was placed from within the same state as the online wagering establishment.
That's my story, and I'm sticking to it!
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Re:I'll bet... (Score:1)
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Re:gambling not bad (Score:1)
There is a definite need for monitoring, but how this shall be accomplished, I don't know. And how long before someone cracks whatever protection system they come up with? Anyway, that's my two cents.
Re:"spoof" is reaching popular culture (Score:1)
Dictionary.com (fount of wisdom for we poor spellers) says "Sometime in the 19th century Arthur Roberts (1852-1933) invented a game called Spoof, which involved trickery and nonsense. The first recorded reference to the game in 1884 refers to its revival. It was not long before the word spoof took on the general sense "nonsense, trickery," first recorded in 1889. The verb spoof is first recorded in 1889 as well, in the sense "to deceive.""
You seem to have a certain, context-specific meaning stuck in your head. Fine. Words can have lots of context-specific meanings (check out the word "punk" for instance -- "The punk lit the punk, punk!"), but by having special meanings in some small corner of the world, they don't lose their larger, more general meanings.
In the context of this article, it would be entirely accurate to use the word "spoof" to describe a user faking age or location to get around the restrictions NV would like to impose.
Whether that's (morally) right or not is up to you, but jeesh, why the knee-jerk reaction? Hope you had a nice graduation from 8th grade, sorry about how you always got picked on, why take it out on people with a middlin' vocabulary?
simon
p.s.: Unless I misinterpreted what you were trying to say here, in which case forget it and laugh it off. :)
Re:"spoof" is reaching popular culture (Score:1)
OK, I give! Sorry to start out like the Comic Book Guy from the Simpsons, that was uncivil and uncalled for. Someone else in this same thread (can't find now -- moderated too low?) seemed to say exactly what I *thought* (falsely) that you were saying, and I had a little knee jerk reaction of my own. (You should have seen my response before I tried to make it non-inflammatory;))
Mea culpa, and I apologize for the 8th-grade crack. I rather liked getting out of 8th grade myself (not a bad year, except for math class, really, but boy did I have some bad teachers), though you had a better vacation afterward from the sound of it.
Cheers and humility,
simon
Clean running != no toxic waste (Score:1)
Should the state get to charge people $500,000 every two years for operating a business without toxic waste?
Just because computers do not emit any waste while they are running, that does not make them "green". One has to consider their impact on the environment in other ways. It takes massive amounts of energy and all kinds of nasty materials to produce electronic equipment. It also takes a fair amount of energy to run and cool those computers, and that energy does not come from clean sources (yet). Then there is the issue of disposal and waste when perfectly functional machines are typically sent to the landfill. Fortuneately some companies are stepping up to the plate to handle this issue, but most people simply toss that old computer and monitor.
Re:Net Gambling... (Score:1)
Just some advice: Never bet on Verizon. You'll lose every time. (I had to learn that the hard way)
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Why do I have the feeling... (Score:2)
Entry fee (Score:4)
Licnse? (Score:1)
Re:gambling not bad (Score:1)
> blackjack with an 8 year old?
Depends. How much cash has he got?
Chris Mattern
This is very Good news. (Score:1)
Re:Nevada not just for porn anymore. (Score:1)
Re:gambling not bad (Score:1)
Jaysyn
As an non-US citizen (Score:2)
I have to say: what's all the fuss about? We have online betting here in the UK, in fact the government recently lowered gambling taxes to dissuade people from betting using off-shore services. I'm known to occasionally have a little flutter on the Grand Prix myself (except you Americans and your CART racing seem to have led JP Montoya into bad habits since his amazing performance in F3000).
Anyway, don't most states in the US run a lottery? In what way is this not gambling?
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Fingerprint scans to detect minors ?? (Score:3)
Or maybe they want to detect dirty fingers to identify teenagers ...
Re:Awright, online blackjack! (Score:2)
Getting the basic "when to hit / when to stand" rules down is pretty easy, it's the card counting stuff that most novices have trouble with.
I figure that because of this the casinos would offer this game under normal Las Vegas rules...
-S
NV-MOB.gov - suck-me (Score:1)
Screw that. I think people should open up shop out of country - and continue to break the "law" on this one.
I dont see why the people of the US continually let
we are not getting anywhere - we just look at this as "oh well - looks like nevada is closer to holding the monopoly on gambling"
that is a big deal. what if you start an online gambling.cash site outside US borders. you can be punished for having US citizens use your site - or it is blocked, or you have to pay NEVADA 500k.
fuck them.
sorry for the rant....
Good for Nevada! (Score:1)
Re:Why is net use different from anything else? (Score:1)
Re:"spoof" is reaching popular culture (Score:1)
Not me, pally. (Score:2)
Re:gambling not bad (Score:1)
Why is net use different from anything else? (Score:2)
It comes down to this (IANAL, of course):
Is it OK to place a bet over the phone from another state that doesn't allow gambling?
If yes, then go to reasonable lengths to secure ID, etc., if not, I don't see how a computer connection is any different from a phone connection. You're in one state, completing a transaction in another state. It's either OK or not, regardless of whether you use the web (or at least should be, IMHO).
I'm over hnyah, and you're over hnnyah.
Here's one for ya! (Score:1)
I'm gonna make a fortune.
Murphy's Law of Copiers
will they Block network trafic ? (Score:1)
Doing this would require a lot of work, because it requires cooperation between all part involved.
Theres the financial issue too. Here in Brazil all kinds of gambling is illegal, and according to the law one doesnt have to honor gambling debts, so if a brazilian looses he/she doesnt have to pay. are they prepared to deal with this kind of situation, or with misuse of credit card numbers ?
Im asking this because I dont feel this idea of biometrics or GPS will ever work. The idea of having a GPS unit or biometric scanner sent to every gamblers house is ridiculous...
Re:gambling not bad (Score:1)
Letting minors participate in gambling is simply unwise, from the casino's point of view. Minors are not responsible for contracts they sign, and can not be forced to pay any gambling debt they incurr. The casinos will do their best to insure that the only folks who play are folks whom they can legaly contract with.
As for getting kids to attend school by letting them gamble... well, I just don't know how to experess the utter lunacy of that idea without appearing to be insulting or judgmental.
Re:gambling not bad (Score:1)
The same reason that minors aren't allowed to drink, drive automobiles, buy weapons, etc. Minors are basically shorter, dumber, versions of adults. There are certain hazards and risks that children need to be shielded from until they've developed an adequate understanding of the subject. Besides who the hell is going to want to play blackjack with an 8 year old? ;-)
And if you don't think that gambling is dangerous - try standing in an elevator and overhearing a 20-something couple try to figure out what to do about losing $8000. It's a real eye-opener.
I'm still confused... (Score:1)
oh well... I've got more important things to concern myself with...
Your Rights Online?? (Score:1)
Re:Gambling online... (Score:2)
If Nevada allows the game, and your state allows the game, then federal law isn't involved, even though the games are coming over a wire. Even in the case of sports bets and betting information, which are spelled out clearly as illegal to transmit over interstate wires, there's a loophole for transmissions to and from states that permit that kind of sports betting. Intervening states can't stop it.
Of course, the Internet is pervasive, and completely insecure. If people in Atlantic City can log into video poker machines in Las Vegas, then so can the 12-year-old h4xx0r son of a Mormon Elder's Wife Number 9 in Salt Lake City, in between Jenna Jameson tapes and shots of Herradura.
--Blair
Re:Gambling online... (Score:2)
Here's the non-safewebbed link to the
FindLaw.Com [findlaw.com]: Laws: Cases and Codes [findlaw.com]: U.S. Code [findlaw.com]: Keyword Search [findlaw.com] page.
--Blair
"-1: Doofus."
Re:gambling not bad (Score:1)
a) It is in the casino's interests to have restrictions on minors. If you are under 18 you are not legally bound to a contract, so their parents could sue to get any money the kid lost back. Of course, if the kid wins noone is going to find out. So it is lose/lose for the casino. Not to mention the bad press. b) As a Christian, we generally don't like gambling not because it is "the work of the devil" but because it generally takes the money of those who can least afford it. Yea, sure, your educated and understand probability. But gambling (especially state lottos) takes the money of poor uneducated people who don't understand probability. Personally I don't think the government should be in the gambling business. And I think that it is OK to restrict gambling to Vegas and Atlantic City. I mean, if you have enough money to gamble it shouldn't be a big deal to travel to do it. And if your so addicted to gambling that you need to do it constantly, you need help.
networked slots (Score:1)
I suppose the casino's are licking their chops at the chance of people across the country playing 21 through their servers or rolling virtual craps... Imagine the BSOD right after a "roll."
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Re:gambling not bad (Score:1)
As long as there are multiple choice tests there will be lessons on gambling in school!
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Re:gambling not bad (Score:1)
[Tangental] RFC: Extention to Godwin's Law (Score:1)
Can I get an extention to Godwin's law stating that one who uses "the crack cocaine of..." in their argument also automatically loses said argument? The whole crack cocaine being more addictive, yadda,yadda has been debunked, so why not put the saying where it belongs, ie, the garbage
Re:I can't see this as being a Good Thing (tm) (Score:1)
First off, Re: Hwy 50 - It's a US highway, which means it has been shafted since the interstate highway system stole all the money from the rather efficient US highway system. Gambling money has little to do with this, you need to talk to your congress person about that problem.
Second off, Re: "unfairness" - Tough shit. Your state has had an unnatural advantage right now due to the scarcity of legalized gaming, your state hates indian gaming, and screams when nearby states think about allowing more gaming permits. Which means if there is legalized gaming in other states, we finally have equality and fairness.
gambling not bad (Score:4)
Useless (Score:2)
I can't see this as being a Good Thing (tm) (Score:3)
Unless there's some wacky tax thing that I don't fully understand, the State doesn't pull any tax dollars off of gambling online. No State revenue from gambling is a Bad Thing (tm). Want an example, take Hwy 50 going east out of Fallon. Last time I was down that way, the road was in a horrible state of disrepair. If these online casinoes start to crop up all over the United States, then the Great State of Nevada could stand to lose millions annually. Legal gambling in other states = bad.
Nevada has no "W" in it, so stop pronouncing it like it does. Nevada != Nuh vaw duh