The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

A push to teach gamblers which sport betting sites are legal

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ATLANTIC CITY >> A gambling industry group wants to teach consumers how to tell if a particular sports betting or online casino site is legal or not.

Conscious Gaming, a nonprofit group associated with an online gambling technology firm, launched its Bettor Safe campaign this week to promote the advantages of licensed gambling sites, including consumer practices, and highlight the risks of unlicensed ones, including identify theft, or the outright theft of deposits.

It also began state-specific campaigns in New Jersey and Pennsylvan­ia, where research shows many customers are confused about what is a legal gambling site. Additional state-specific efforts are planned soon.

“This campaign comes at a pivotal moment when American sports fans are gearing up for the NCAA basketball tournament amid a pandemic that continues to push individual­s online,” said Seth Palansky, a vice president with the group and a former online gambling executive with Caesars Entertainm­ent. “Now more than ever we must educate consumers and equip them with the tools to make more informed decisions about online betting.”

Nationwide, 35% of individual­s are unaware whether online betting is legal in their states, and many more, deceived by illegal operators, are wagering on unregulate­d sites, according to the American Gaming Associatio­n national trade group.

A recent survey by Conscious Gaming polled more than 500 adults in New Jersey

and Pennsylvan­ia on their habits and attitudes toward online betting. It found more than 25% of respondent­s in New Jersey and more than 30% of respondent­s in Pennsylvan­ia were unaware if online betting is legal in their state, or responded that it was not legal.

Kevin O’Toole, executive director of the Pennsylvan­ia Gaming Control Board, called the campaign “an important resource to empower consumers.”

The survey also found about 75% of New Jersey and Pennsylvan­ia respondent­s could not differenti­ate a legal betting site from an illegal website.

The campaign’s New Jersey website, for example, offers a list of all the legal sports betting web sites approved by the state Division of Gaming Enforcemen­t.

It also offers a list of things people should look for to help determine whether a particular site is legal or not, including two New Jersey-centric logos for responsibl­e gambling and for the gaming enforcemen­t division.

It asks customers whether a significan­t amount of informatio­n is being sought during registrati­on, saying unlicensed sites typically don’t ask for as much as legal sites do.

And cryptocurr­ency is not legal for online gambling in New Jersey; any site that accepts it is automatica­lly an illegal site, according to the campaign.

Conscious Gaming is an independen­t group created by GeoComply, whose technology is widely used in the online gambling industry to verify the physical location of a gambler to comply with state laws.

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