The Malta Business Weekly

News Malta regulator warns OPs about eSports betting integrity pitfalls

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Malta’s gambling regulator is warning its licensees to safeguard the integrity of their betting markets in these topsy-turvy pandemic times.

On Monday, the Malta Gaming Authority issued a notice to sports betting licensees who have found themselves with nothing to offer their customers following the mass cancellati­on of sports and racing events due to the Covid-19 coronaviru­s.

Desperate times may call for desperate measures but the MGA is worried that its bookmakers will throw caution to the wind in offering “betting on events with different risk profiles to those traditiona­lly offered”, such as eSports, which may not be run “to the same profession­al degree as the more traditiona­l sporting events”.

The MGA wants operators to ensure that eSports matches aren’t pre-recorded and for bookmakers’ risk teams to know if there’s a preset delay between the actual match and the public broadcast. (That warning took on fresh relevance on Monday when bookmakers suspended wagering on the NBA 2K20 tournament after its results leaked online.) Operators should also verify informatio­n regarding the participan­ts and officials and to ensure that none of these individual­s are wagering on the outcome.

The MGA warned that eSports events now all happen online and therefore lack the standard integrity checks ordinarily conducted at “real” sports events. As such, operators need to check a tournament’s integrity controls, including whether the participan­ts are profession­al before deciding on which betting markets to offer.

The MGA also wants operators to ensure that their customers understand the difference between eSports and virtual sports – such as last weekend’s Virtual Grand National – in which the outcome is determined by a computer algorithm.

Finally, the MGA insists that any suspicious betting activity be reported to gambling regulators, while any dodgy non-betting activity should be reported to the correspond­ing sports governing bodies and/or event organisers.

Even “real” sports can’t be trusted in this day and age, as evidenced by last week’s pantomime football match between players masqueradi­ng as members of two real Ukrainian junior level squads.

In other MGA news, the regulator announced the cancellati­on of the license issued to Bimbabet Ltd for the operator’s failure to (a) provide the MGA with its key functions list, (b) submit financial statements for the past two years, and (c) pay its annual license and compliance contributi­on fees.

The MGA also recently denied any connection with a number of online gambling sites, including Cyprusbase­d 1xBet.com, as well as a handful of lesser known sites (egibet103.com, fairbahis1­0.com and livebid.in).

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