Genius Sports and Clue launch sports integrity intelligence platform

Genius Sports said it will use the new system to help anticipate and detect global trends in betting-related corruption, support investigations and provide increased visibility to sports organisations worldwide.

It added that UK-based Clue’s proprietary intelligence platform will heighten efficiency and interoperability between Genius Sports’ teams based across four continents. Clue provides software solutions to private enterprises, police, government, and sporting organisations such as the International Tennis Integrity Agency and International Cricket Council.

“This partnership with Clue is an exciting next step in our continued investment in our sports integrity offering,” said Simon Martyn, director of rights enforcement & integrity at Genius Sports, which is the integrity partner to over 150 leagues and federations around the world. “Their leading software gives us the edge in tackling the clear and present danger of match-fixing by delivering intelligence and investigative capabilities that can help prevent, detect and disrupt betting-related corruption.”

Clue’s system will provide a centralised digital vault that will house Genius Sports’ entire library of integrity risk assessment reports. The group’s team of expert analysts will be able to access and analyse reports, cross-referenced by a detailed red, amber, or green risk assessment, graded on the potential level of integrity risk. Through Clue’s software, each report will be indexed against relevant news articles and blogs, match footage and analysis to provide an enhanced level of integrity intelligence.

The new system will produce customised reports and dashboards, segregated by individual players, teams, match officials, competitions, and regions across multiple sports.

“From match manipulation to safeguarding and hate crime to anti-doping investigations, Clue has an inherent ability to provide a trusted solution in sports integrity,” said Phil Suddick, head of sport at Clue. “The partnership with Genius Sports is an amazing and unprecedented opportunity to provide protection and intelligence to over 150 sporting leagues and federations.

“Genius Sports and Clue have taken this golden opportunity to deter, disrupt and detect those criminals who seek to manipulate sporting events.”

PokerStars launches in Ontario

The AGCO approved the business’s parent company, TSG Interactive Canada, for an internet gaming licence earlier in the month; detailing that the licence would be in effect from 8 June 2022, with an expiration date of 7 June 2024.

TSG Interactive is a subsidiary of Flutter Entertainment, which acquired it in 2020.

Marketing director Tom Warren commented: “In many respects Ontario is our home market, given the first ever hand of PokerStars was played here over 20 years ago, so we are thrilled about the new regulated environment within which our players can play.”

“A lot has changed in that time, but our commitment to offering our players the most epic and thrilling experience in the market hasn’t – and we can’t wait to get started.”

PokerStars is the largest real-money online poker site in the world and controls roughly two third of the online poker market.

In April, the business launched a peer-to-peer betting site, PokerStars Exchange, which uses the same global liquidity pool as Betfair – which is also ultimately owned by Flutter Entertainment.  

New German regulator to implement payment and IP blocking from 1 July

The body is set to fully take over regulation of gambling in Germany on 1 January, 2023. However, it will begin to take action against unlicensed operators and those advertising their sites from Friday (1 July).

The regulator has now given its first indications of how it will enforce this policy. It said it will use both payment and IP address blocking in order to shut down unlicensed operations.

“In addition to regular controls, the main focus when it comes to curbing illegal gambling is the implementation of the enforcement instruments IP blocking and payment blocking,” it said.

The Glücksspielbehörde added that it will “provide information on the concrete procedure for combating illegal gambling and the use of enforcement instruments such as IP blocking and payment blocking” on 8 July.

The body also mentioned work against sites advertising unlicensed gambling, suggesting that it will also take action against affiliates.

The announcement comes alongside the Glücksspielbehörde announcing the appointment of Nadja Wierzejewski as department head responsible for combating illegal gambling and advertisements for it.

Wierzejewski is currently head of gaming supervision for the state of Rheinland-Pfalz, a role she has held since 2008.

In her new role, Nadja Wierzejewski will also be responsible for the national gaming supervision system (LUGAS). This system will note the participation of players across all licensed German operators, in order to enforce rules such as the country’s cross-operator deposit cap.

While a number of operators have received sports betting licences for the German market, so far only three are licensed for online slots. Mernov received the first licence last month, with Tipwin and Mybet joining the list last week. Strict rules under Germany’s Fourth State Treaty on Gambling have been a major hurdle to entry. The treaty carried a number of conditions, including a €1 stake limit for slots. In addition, operators must pay 5.3% of their turnover in tax.

Evidence The Star is suitable licensee “does not exist”, lawyer concludes

This was revealed during the final day of testimony in the NSW Authority’s review into The Star’s licence. The public hearings began on 17 March 2022.

Sharp stated that she believes more “reflection and investigation” is needed for the operator in addition to the original review, and that appropriate compliance measures- including anti-money laundering (AML) and counter terrorism financing (CTF) – were not put in place at the appropriate times.

“We submit that you would reject the submission made by senior council for The Star and The Star Entertainment, that there is already a strong foundation for a proper and sound approach and compliance in relation to AML and CTF,” said Sharp.

“We submit that there has been a significant uplift in AML and CFT framework, but that is not something that has changed since the review commenced. That uplift commenced around August 2018.”

Sharp went on to detail that members of senior management at The Star “repeatedly misled” the ILGA, and that clear evidence would be needed to grant The Star the right to operate.

“We submit that in these extraordinary circumstances, you would need to be persuaded by very compelling evidence that The Star and The Star Entertainment are presently suitable, and we submit that this evidence does not exist,” said Sharp.

“What the evidence does establish is that there has been a delinquent culture among the ranks of senior management. Number two, there has been a very serious failure of risk management framework, and a very serious failure of the second line of defense. Three, an absence of a culture of compliance in terms of money laundering and counter terrorism financing obligations.”

Sharp also pointed out that a number negative changes have taken place at The Star and Star Entertainment since the review first began in September 2021.

“There has been a significant number of resignations. Many of those resignations are drawn from members of senior management,” she continued.

“Secondly, there have been suspensions – or an end to – areas where misconduct has occurred. In addition to that the EEIS bank accounts have been closed and steps are being taken to de-register.”

The review into The Star has been eventful. During the hearings, management at The Star were said to have made “misleading” statements to its bank regarding non-gambling related transactions.

The Star’s executive chair, John O’Neill, announced that he would step down from his role on the company’s board. He had spent less than two months in the position, and news of his departure came just one week before he was set to give evidence in The Star review.

Can Sportradar’s Orako be all things to all operators?

Since the purchase of sportsbook platform Optima in 2019, Sportradar has been building its own turnkey sportsbook solution for operators.

Orako, its recently announced managed-services solution, is the result.

Flexibility is a term Curciel often returns to when describing Orako. Flexibility of service, flexibility to adapt.

Optima chief executive and founder Jacob Lopez Curciel is in charge of the project in his role as managing director for managed sportsbook services at Sportradar, ensuring a degree of continuity between the organisations.

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“Orako is offering a compact approach to sporting services, with full flexibility in terms of what services you want to take or not take or you want to take from our sports betting, added to the possibility of getting additional services from other parties as well full integrated as part of the service,” he explains.

That is, Orako can be whatever operators want it to be.

Moving in-house

The sportsbook technology space is highly competitive, with a number of providers competing for deals.

Equally, and potentially ominously for Orako, there are a number of operators that are looking to take their technology in-house, either through M&A or building from existing assets. This, however, is not necessarily an insurmountable obstacle for a new contender, Crucial says.

In his eyes – even for an operator developing their own solution – there will still be a desire to get access to some element of Orako’s services.

“We expect to be part of all those operator’s initiatives when they prefer to develop their own sportsbook service in house,” he says. “Definitely there are the bricks and motor of how you create those services and we at Orako expect that our APIs and our services will also be used in those bespoke solutions being made by those.”

More prosaically, Sportradar is placing innovation at the centre of this strategy, counting on operators’ need to stay abreast and ahead of the latest developments. The aim is to be the first to integrate novel features, so that the business is always one step ahead of the stiff competition.

“We bring that innovation forward. Normally we tend to take the leadership position within the industry – bringing new initiatives, bringing new ways of doing things and new ways of analysing the market and being first to market with many of those initiatives.”

Curciel also believes the best way to stay ahead of the curve is to attract the best talent:

“You need to keep the actual services quality to the top and obviously we invest a lot in talent, giving talent engaged in the capacity we need to drive all those innovations we want to launch into the market.”

Will it be enough? Operators often have deep pockets of their own to attract their own talent – perhaps the future of Orako involves operators picking and choosing the best bits.

This is why Curciel places such an emphasis on flexibility; for example, data collection and analysis is where Sportradar has build its global brand, so it would be where to expect a competitive advantage.

Modular approach

The business aims to offer a modular solution, where sports betting operators can pick from a wide variety of services, and choose the ones they wish to integrate on their platform.

Curciel has an exhaustive list of these services: “We offer data services which allows customisation of the data for operators, we offer as well third party services, feeds integrated into the sportsbook service, managed trading services, managed marketing acquisition services, retention services, visualisation services, streaming services.”

“We offer to provide services for promotions, making sure the promotions are tailored end-to-end by the operators, we provide front end development and customisation services for sports betting, we provide affiliation integration services and also management of the integrations for those third parties.”

Curciel also insists that the operator will be able to additionally choose the degree and level of service, hoping that that the flexibility will allow operators to tweak the platform to meet their needs.

Unwritten future

It has been said that predictions are hard – especially about the future. Curciel admits himself that that uncertainty is the biggest variable going forward: “The biggest challenges is understanding how the players are going to be changing going forward – so we see that customer habits are changing, and we need to understand correctly how those habits are going to factor into that – and be ourselves one of the key drivers of that change in how the customer behaviour is going to end up in the future.”

It’s a pitch with a certain amount of Steve Jobs about it – don’t wait for people to change, give them what they don’t know they want and change them yourself.

Whatever the case – it’s just the beginning for Orako: “Orako a project, product and a service that is in constant evolution. I don’t think we ever could say that the service or the product will be finished, it’s in a state where you can obviously use it in production successfully. It’s all going to work 100% correctly, but we are adding improvements constantly.”

Orako then is intended to be flexible itself to whatever the future holds.

So, it seems that Curciel sees Orako not just as a product with a final design, but a constantly evolving and expanding set of services. And while it’s true that that will enable flexibility for operators – will the wide focus mean the solution ends up jack of all trades, master of none? Or will the multiple vectors just prove too useful to pass up?

BGC slams “draconian” proposed free bets ban

Campaigners have asked the UK government to consider banning free bets as part of its review into the 2005 Gambling Act, which is set to be published imminently.

The BGC cited new data from YouGov, which found that 69% of bettors surveyed said that free bets should be allowed.

Meanwhile, 28% said that they would consider black market betting if a free bets ban was enforced.

A total of 63% said that they viewed free bets as an important part of their gambling experience.

The BGC also pointed to its own analysis, which revealed that a free bets ban would result in a loss of £5m for the horse racing industry.

“Promotions and offers are part of the customer experience for any vibrant industry, including our intensely competitive sector, which supports 119,000 jobs and brings in £4.4bn in taxes to the treasury,” said Michael Dugher, chief executive of the BGC.

“A draconian ban would damage a sector which tens of thousands rely on for their livelihoods, by turning punters away from the regulated industry into the arms of unsafe, unregulated black market gambling, where the numbers using such sites has doubled in recent years and the amount bet is in the billions. These sites have none of the safer gambling tools the regulated industry employ.”

Dugher added that the BGC supports how the government is approaching gambling reform, but disagrees with the focus on how customers choose to bet.

“We support the government’s ‘evidence-led’ approach to gambling reform, which is why any changes should be carefully targeted to protect vulnerable players and those at risk, not the vast majority who bet safely,” continued Dugher. “Ministers should shouldn’t be sticking their nose into how people choose to spend their own money, and the last thing they should be doing at this time is damaging business and sport.”

Betting and online gaming down in Denmark in Q1

According to figures released by the Danish Gambling Authority, betting revenue fell by 3.7% year-on-year to DKK567m ($80.6m/£65.7m/€76.2m), while online gaming revenue dropped 2.5% to DKK702m. The regulator suggested some surprise at the decrease, noting these are the two segments that grown the most in Denmark since the market was liberalised.

However, overall gaming revenue was up by 20.3% year-on-year to DKK 1.57bn. This DKK266m increase was explained by the return of the contribution from land-based gaming, which was closed throughout the corresponding quarter in 2021.

Slot machine play was worth DKK241m in 2022, while land-based casino, which is the smallest segment in Danish gambling, was worth DKK65m. Casinos and gaming halls were closed throughout the first three months of 2021, but closed just for January in 2022.

Denmark’s total gross gaming revenue was up 29.6% year-on-year to DKK9.6bn in 2021, with the largest segment being lotteries, which were worth DKK3.4bn and made up 35% of the total. Lottery figures have not been released within the Q1 2022 update.  

In 2021, online casino generated DKK2.81bn in revenue, which was 29% of the total market. Betting was worth DKK2.42bn, some 25% of the market, while slots and land-based casino made up the final 10%, worth DKK 1.0bn.

Danish lottery and gaming operator Danske Spil recorded gross gaming revenue figures of DKK4.83bn for 2021, representing a 1.9% increase from the previous year. The majority of the revenue – DKK2.79bn – came from lottery operations, up from DKK2.63bn in 2020. Danske Licens Spil – which offers licensed products such as sports betting and gaming – added DKK1.82bn.

During 2021, the Danish government announced its plans to merge Danske Spil with the Danish Class Lottery (Danske Klasselotteri).

Laos to mimic POGO model with new offshore licences

In a model similar to Philippine Offshore Gaming Operators (POGOs), operators that receive a licence may set up an online gambling operation, but may not accept customers who are based in Laos.

Danny Too, a consultant assisting the Laotian government on the process, told iGB that the government is currently in the process of drawing up its regulations for the sector.

He said that the government had planned to publish guidelines to apply for licences in two months’ time.

According to Too, initial master licences are set to be issued to a small number of businesses, which can then contract out “sub-licences” to a wider number of businesses, similar to the model in Curaçao.

Too noted that this was due in part to the effects of Covid-19, which was devastating to Laos’ foreigner-only land-based casinos.

“During the pandemic, all of the casinos were land-based, so obviously there were no tourists coming in and being permitted to gamble at land-based casinos,” he said. “So they wanted to kill two birds with one stone. 

“First, they wanted to regulate gambling more properly, and secondly, they had seen how profitable other countries like the Philippines had been with online gambling. So they said that this is actually a very good proposition.”

POGOs have come under fire from the Chinese government for targeting customers from that country. In 2020, China warned that it would take action against countries that host sites that offer gambling to its citizens. Too said that China was a “very sensitive issue” in the process, but noted that – being much smaller than the Philippines with a population of 7.3 million – Laos would struggle to resist pressure from China “if push comes to shove”.

As a result, he said that other countries such as Thailand would instead be the top priority.

“During the award-giving process, they didn’t mention China at all, they didn’t want to get involved in that,” he said.

At the moment, Too said that the three main frontrunners to receive master licences were all based in Thailand.

While Too said that “90%” of the model would be similar to the POGO system, he said the country hoped to entice operators with lower costs to set up. In addition, he said that Laos  offered a more convenient location for those based in Southeast Asia.

He added that the government of Laos was also working to “hasten” the process for working visas, to allow businesses to hire staff from abroad.

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