At Frank's House Financial Services Committee hearing Thursday, supporters and opponents of Internet gaming alternately advocated for and condemned online gambling, which is said to add up to $16 billion a year with most of that figure coming from U.S. bettors.
Some speakers at the meeting said technologies already exist that can be used and improved to regulate online gambling in a way to generate new tax revenues while also generating jobs for U.S. companies. Others testified that online gambling would take jobs from traditional legal gaming venues.
Congressman Frank has been an outspoken critic of legislation passed in 2006, the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act. That legislation, which sought to prohibit financial institutions from accepting payments for online betting, was never implemented and was criticized by many banks and financial institutions as being too complicated and impossible to implement. The American Bankers Association, for instance, was among the many petitioners seeking to delay implementation of the law.
At the hearing Thursday, Michael Brodsky, executive chairman of online wagering company Youbet.com, argued that technology already exists to regulate online wagering.
"Today's out-of-control Internet gambling situation was made possible by the revolution in technology," he said, "and it will take technology to fix itThe already-existing, totally legal, online pari-mutual horserace wagering industry is a U.S.-based model of how to provide a responsible online wagering experience for adults." Online pari-mutual betting is legal in several U.S. states and Brodsky's company, which is in the process of being acquired by Churchill Downs, provides technological infrastructure for pari-mutual gambling.
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