The Department of Culture, Media and Sport and UK
Gambling Commission released their highly anticipated online casino and gaming
jurisdiction whitelist today, ahead of the September 1 enforcement date that
will allow whitelisted online gaming companies to advertise in England. A tough
set of regulations to say the least, only two gaming jurisdictions have been
approved for the whitelist, while several others were outright denied and a
couple more still await a decision.
The two whitelisted online gaming jurisdictions are
none other than Alderney and Isle of Man - both of which have been actively
updating their regulatory framework the past few years in order to keep up with
the new heightened standards imposed by the UK Gambling Act of 2005 and leading
independent regulators such as
eCOGRA. Come September 1, online casinos licensed
in these two jurisdictions will have limited freedoms to advertise in the UK,
including television adverts.
According to a press release issued by the
Department of Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS), only Alderney and Isle of Man
were able to demonstrate their licensing framework had adequate and effective
provisions for preventing criminal activities, protecting minors and high risk
bettors, as well as protocols ensuring games are continually fair. Details were
not given as to what areas were lacking for those gaming jurisdictions put on
the UK government's non-whitelist, which does not mean they have been
blacklisted by any means. They simply did not adequately demonstrate they were
up to par with the UK Gambling Act.
Those online gaming jurisdictions who did not make
the cut include Curacao, Netherlands Antilles, Alexander First Nation and
Tasmania. Both Kahnawake and Antigua and Barbuda are still awaiting their fate.
The DCMS said they will continue to monitor Alderney and Isle of Man to ensure
they maintain their regulatory regime, which includes provisions requiring
licensed online casinos to donate funds to problem gambling research, education
and rehabilitation programs. The DCMS made no apologies for putting nearly 1,000
online gaming sites on the non-whitelist.
Some online casinos, such as
Inter Casino
(currently licensed in Curacao), are already making arrangements to get
licensing elsewhere. Inter Casino apparently will have a permanent gaming
license from Malta by the end of the week. Since Malta is in the European
Economic Area, Inter Casino will be permitted to advertise in the UK, which they
say they are planning to be amongst the first to do so. Only those regulatory
areas outside of the European Economic Area who have made the whitelist will be
permissible for advertising.