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June 30, 2010 at 10:27 am #622087fintanMember
After yesterday’s hearing, Senator Rod Wright has announced that he’s “pulling” his legislation to regulate online poker in California. Read more here.
June 30, 2010 at 10:29 am #810941fintanMemberWhat do you guys think? Good or bad news? Combine this with the news out of New Hampshire and New Jersey recently, and it doesn’t seem like *any* online gambling bills are going to get approved by lawmakers — for better or for worse.
Still, given how radical some of these proposals are, that might be the best thing for online gambling affiliate marketers …
June 30, 2010 at 12:17 pm #810942nsaadehMemberI think they should just get a clear cut law passed governing the whole country, and of course in favour of giving the American Citizens the “FREEDOM OF CHOICE”
June 30, 2010 at 1:10 pm #810944AnonymousInactive@Nathan 220330 wrote:
What do you guys think? Good or bad news? Combine this with the news out of New Hampshire and New Jersey recently, and it doesn’t seem like *any* online gambling bills are going to get approved by lawmakers — for better or for worse.
Still, given how radical some of these proposals are, that might be the best thing for online gambling affiliate marketers …
Nathan, I still think that these proposals are coming out at the wrong time, since online gambling talk is a political hot potato going into an election. I think we will have a much better chance of passing these laws (somewhere !) after the 2010 elections, and into 2011, as the economy continues to deteriorate and debt mounts. And yes, a law such as the one on CA, is way to stringent, and certainly not affiliate friendly at all….so, for affiliates, this bill going down in flames in a plus for us all.
June 30, 2010 at 1:12 pm #810945AnonymousInactive@FurnessPoker 220332 wrote:
I think they should just get a clear cut law passed governing the whole country, and of course in favour of giving the American Citizens the “FREEDOM OF CHOICE”
Well, I think we all agree on that. That is a much tougher nut to crack than at the state level, given the magnitude of the passing of UIGEA.
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