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Not even Canada is safe from the US gambling ban
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Some day people will learn that the LONG ARM of the US LAW is something that we all may deal with one day or another.
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lol, you give this thumbs up?????????
wait till the Chinese take over - that'll make you even happier, then you'll see similar message on all your adult sites (in Chinese though) |
with all the banners you would think they would make them links
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there is no money in online gambling also
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usa = corrupt
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That page looks like it's a joke. My eyes are bleeding.
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:Oh crap :Oh crap :Oh crap
The implications go so much further than simply gambling sites.....truly a disturbing thread.... |
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its amazing that everyone thinks its crazy that a country would protect its own trillion dollar industry. right, wrong, moral, hypocritical etc etc... is irrelevant. every country does the same. granted, this seems to be quite a reach in terms of the law and violates WTO agreements but the stakes are also extremely high and from a purely economic perspective, worth the fight and fallout. if any country was bringing in and/or generating triillons of dollars from one industryand suddenly, it was threatened,.... just like any other country, they would fight to protect it... and as they did so, no one on the outside would think or agree that its fair. thats life. puppies die. little girls get cancer and the US Government tries to protect its own gaming industry.
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it is the same deal with online gambling it is not the online casinos fault that the american citizens come to gamble, if they are based out of another country they should not be touched. it is the american citizens that are the ones breaking the law. you cannot have a foreign country trying to strongarm other countries companies out of business. |
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and maybe you are right. maybe foreign countries should sue US casinos. why not (besides the painfully obvious problem of tracking and indentifying money lost or won by patrons)? why is that any less unreasonable? |
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OFF TOPIC "not even Canada is safe from the US gambling ban" for the illiterate... i never said it was ok, i dont know where you pulled this out of your ass, your post has nothing to do with the thread, if you feel the need to start your own inner discussion start your own thread. |
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you need to go to Vegas and thaw out and relax. also, good luck in your pursuit of a career as a message board moderator. you're off to a strong start. you'll find the pay is shit... but apparently you will really enjoy the percieved sense of power and authority. |
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America, Fuck ya!!! Coming to save the Mutherfucking day ya!!!
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nothing really changed
there are still sites accepting usa players usa people are still playing online poker for real money there are still affiliates making 10,000+ a day from online gambling |
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you made a good point, i feel i made a good point, then you totally strayed away from the topic. i am just not going to go into a conversation with you that has nothing to do with the topic, which it seems you have me doing anyway by responding to your post. |
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get a grip! |
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This might have had something to do with it http://72.14.253.104/search?q=cache:Ishz43LjE1QJ:www.pokerbandits.ca/showthread.php%3Ft%3D16+pokerbandits.ca&hl=en&ct=c lnk&cd=2&gl=ca
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they are definitely reading gfy too. hi fox :) |
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It appears that the former site was a tutorial for breaking the law. Of course it was shut down. Duh. |
The house always wins.
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Not to mention the umpteen websites featuring the making of illegal bombs and such, how to make meth in your own home etc..... it's called free speech .... Not to mention the contents of that forum don't change the fact that the FBI has infiltrated Canadian jurisdiction..... |
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The war on gambling will go the route of the war on drugs.
The gamblers will just find a differrent way to do it. The US will have wasted billions of dollars before we finally give up on it. |
Canada has always been the 51th US State, dunno why everyone is surprised.
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After doing some digging, the general consensus in online gambling circles is that the site is a fake. Canadian authorities are saying it's a hoax, and FBI sources say the same.
Still looking/waiting for confirmation on this. |
From Casino City
Pokerbandits.ca shut down a hoax February 12, 2007 by Aaron Todd It appears that the Internet rumors that pokerbandits.ca was shut down by the U.S. Department of Justice, the FBI and the Canadian government were just that: Internet rumors. Officials from all three authorities had not heard of the Web site and denied any part in the removal of content from the site. Pokerbandits.ca, which until recently offered advice on how Americans could get around Internet gambling restrictions, announced this morning that it had been shut down. "This site has been shut down by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Department of Justice in conjunction with Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada," read bold black text over a brick red background. "Normally we don't comment on ongoing cases," said Justice Department spokeswoman Jaclyn Lesch. "But I'm not getting any indication that we're involved in this whatsoever." An FBI spokesman also knew nothing about the site. "I checked the cyber division, the Department of Justice, and no one seems to know anything about it," said FBI agent Paul Bresson. The domain was registered at Namespro.ca on Oct. 23, 2006, just weeks after the UIGEA was passed in Congress. This morning, a "WHOIS" search revealed that the registration information had been changed Sunday and the "Government of Canada" in "Gatineau, Quebec," was listed as the site's administrative mailing address. "Jack Chow" was listed as the administrative and technical contact for the site, but the phone number led instead to Michael Gee, the contact person for the Public Works and Government Services Web site. "This information is totally false," Gee said of the WHOIS information. "This person must have seen that I have a Chinese name and made up a different (Chinese name)." Gee also pointed out that the e-mail address points to a domain that does not exist, and that the phone number listed includes an extension, despite the fact that the department's phone numbers have no extensions and can be directly dialed. "If someone wants to falsify something, there's not much we can do about that," said David Hicks, a spokesman for the Canadian Internet Registration Authority. "In regards to CIRA, when people provide false information, we can remove the domain, but we really don't do that very often." Hicks added that CIRA also removes sites with illegal information on occasion, but that wasn't the case with pokerbandits.ca. Shortly after Casino City contacted CIRA, visitors to pokerbandits.ca were greeted by a "Forbidden" error message, announcing the user did not have access to the server. A second WHOIS search revealed that the contact information was changed, listing Arif Khan as the Administrative and Technical contact, and all references to the Canadian government had been removed. Pokerbandits.ca had offered information on one of its message boards how American citizens could get around the UIGEA. The step-by-step guide suggested Americans could use Canadian mailing addresses and IP masking technology to sign up for Internet gambling accounts. Casino City was unable to contact Khan, and e-mails and phone calls to "Raven Corp," which published a press release announcing pokerbandits.ca's guide to getting around the UIGEA in January, were unanswered. *********** |
And by the way...what a brilliant plan..... think about how many 1way links that domain got today on webmaster boards.....in a couple of days the content is replaced with a gambling portal and will kick ass in google .....brilliant I tell ya....
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