News: Allstate Illinois Data Center Achieves LEED Gold Certification
Blogs: M&M’s --- Part I - This stands for Marketing and Money
Blogs: Sometimes not making money is ok....
(WEB HOST INDUSTRY REVIEW) -- Issuing a final regulation this week aimed at banning Internet gambling by stopping money transactions, the US Republican government has been met with criticism for placing the burden on financial institutions.
According to reports from major news agencies including the Washington Post, the Unlawful Internet Gambling Act, spanning 120 pages, details how banks must identify and block illegal online gambling transactions starting as soon as January, prohibiting them from accepting payments from credit cards, checks or electronic fund transfers to settle online bets.
The chairman of the House Financial Services Committee Barney Frank has stood in opposition to the regulations, saying that it is rushed and its implications have not been fully considered.
As the Act stands, it will "burden the financial services industry at a time of economic crisis," he wrote in a letter to Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Federal Reserve Board of Governors Chairman Ben Bernanke, asking them to postpone issuing regulations. "I am deeply disappointed to hear that your agency is proceeding with what I consider to be unseemly haste in issuing regulations."
One of the other flaws Frank addresses is that the regulations do not define "unlawful Internet gambling." Frank writes, "leaving it to each financial institution to reconcile conflicting state and federal laws, court decisions and inconsistent Department of Justice interpretations when determining whether to process a transaction."
Favoring legislation that would require a study of Internet gambling and the impacts of regulating it, House Representative Shelley Berkley, who like Frank is a Democrat, said in a statement, "The clock is ticking on President Bush's prohibitionist crusade against Internet gaming and that is clearly why these flawed regulations are being forced on the financial services industry at the very last minute."
From its inception in 2006, Information Week reports, odds were stacked against this controversial legislation. "Its original supporters maintained the legislation would protect the morals of young Americans while opponents argued that it is too difficult to ban online gambling, because a ban is too difficult to enforce."
The Associated Press reports that US gamblers supply at least half of the $16 billion Internet gambling industry's revenue, which is largely hosted on overseas sites.
This is the latest government intervention in a long line of efforts to block US citizens from online gambling.
In September, Governor Steve Beshear launched a civil suit against 141 domains linked to gambling websites with the goal of seizing them to block Kentucky residents from accessing the sites.
Kentucky Judge Thomas Wingate, shortly after, denied the state's attempt to seize the domains until more evidence was made available; however, Judge Wingate will hear arguments pro and con before November 17, when he will make a possible landmark decision giving the state control of the gambling domain names.
Read Back Issues of WHIR Magazine
October 2009 - Web Hosting's All Star Team
This has been, for us, one of the most interesting, exciting and challenging build-ups to an issue of the magazine yet, Web Hosting's All Star Team. The balloting process was our first experiment with a kind of user participation we're planning to do a lot more with in the months to come. We had thousands of ballots submitted, with hundreds of write-in suggestions and a demonstration of user engagement that has us feeling super positive about the project.
About This Issue | Read Digital Edition
July 2009 - What am I Worth?
One of the interesting luxuries of working on a project like the printed WHIR magazine is that it allows us to play with things like our point of view from one issue to the next. In recent months we've been giving added attention to the kind of practical and applicable advice aimed at smaller hosts and resellers. This issue carries on with that point of view, asking, in our cover story, "what am I worth?" It's a complicated question without a clear-cut answer.
About This Issue | Read Digital Edition
May 2009 - The Blueprint for a Small Web Host
I was a little surprised by how difficult it became to see this idea through. We set out to assemble a blueprint for a small hosting business, but butted up pretty quickly against the general impossibility of covering all the territory that was out there to be covered. The basic constraints of a printed magazine, and the less-than-infinite amount of time we had available forced us to face the fact that we could never produce an exhaustive guide to starting a hosting company.
About This Issue | Read Digital Edition






















Comment anonymously or log into your WHIR account
Logging in allows enhanced commenting features (such as external linking) in news, features, blogs and more.