Kentucky Seizes 132 Domain Names
The Commonwealth of Kentucky is seizing 132 gambling domains in the latest step in a case that stretches back to 2008. According to Kentucky prosecutors, the domains in question represent illegal gambling devices and are in violation of the state’s gaming laws.
Although the case is 18 months old, it comes right on the heels of a similar domain seizure in Maryland that ensnared Bodog.com, amongst others.
In light of these actions many in the gaming world are wondering whether the future of igaming will reside on .eu domains that don’t fall under the jurisdiction of the U.S. Department of Justice.
Some of the domains are 123bingo.com, mysportsbook.com, vegasvilla.com, jackpotcity.com, cakepoker.com and royalvegas.com. Check out the full list here.
How It Began
Back in August of 2008 the Commonwealth of Kentucky ran an extensive investigation to see whether offshore gaming sites would do business with Kentucky residents. As a result of that investigation 141 sites that were in violation of Kentucky statutes were identified and singled out for seizure.
When Will Online Poker Be Legal?
Though most site owners ignored the notices from Kentucky, a few groups stepped up to fight the charges. Notably, the Internet Commerce Association (ICA) and other trade groups stepped in to file Amicus briefs to help fight the rulings. ICA maintained that many of the sites offered only games of skill (poker) which are in fact legal in the Bluegrass State.
Check out the official document here!
At one point an appellate court ruled that domain names did not qualify as gambling instruments and sent the case back to the lower courts. After a year’s worth of legal wrangling, mostly centered on the trade association’s right to represent domain owners, the case finally came to its conclusion.
.com Might Not Be the Future
Given the recent rash of domain seizures by American authorities, more and more webmasters are reconsidering the value of .com domain gaming sites. The main root servers for all .com domains are based in the U.S. and fall squarely under the charge of the U.S. Commerce Department.
Whether the situation with .com gaming names will change if online poker is made legal in the U.S. is anyone’s guess. But for the short term, they seem to be squarely in the sites of American law enforcement.
Are you going to keep your sites on .com domains in light of this most recent U.S. seizure? Let us know our Online Gambling Laws and Regulations Forum.
Tags: Calvin Ayre, Microgaming, Sports Betting, US Regulation
If the question is directed to affiliates the answer is ‘yes’. I am keeping .com and not changing to .lv .eu etc.
With all of the flip flopping, it’s hard to make decisions!
Let’s all just hope that they don’t start going after affiliates and start seizing our .com domains. That would just be a complete disaster!
It’s time for the states and the federal government to get together to make some decisions so we can stop living in fear of domains being taken away!
Hmm… now where’s that Romanian dictionary gone?
Ha! What do you mean by that, John?!
Wow! This is huge. Gambling .coms just went from very valuable to having very little value at all. That is if you are privy to this news
I’m selling if you’re buying! Personally I don’t think state gambling will happen anytime soon if at all. At this point they have accomplished abolishing online gambling from the US. My roommate use to play poker online all day now he delivers pizzas!
Even if it does eventually pans out it will be a few key players involved and they won’t be doing the affiliate thing. Unfortunately that’s the hard truth.
It’s hard to make an educated decision when the government seems to go back and forth on their stance. In December, the DOJ says that it had changed one of its most long-held positions on Internet gambling, stating that the federal Wire Act of 1961 only applies to sports betting. YET, states take action like this?!