A.J. Koehn

Easier self-exclusion mechanisms introduced by Dutch regulator

The Dutch gambling regulator, Kansspelautoriteit (KSA), has launched a new mechanism to simplify the process for authorised third-parties to register problem gamblers with the national self-exclusion scheme CRUKS.

Changes are meant to provide persons or guardians authorised by court to manage the finances of others with more legal leverage to put them on the register if problem gambling occurs.

These authorisations are generally made when there are financial problems already occurring in the first place with individuals who are at risk of mismanaging their finances.

Adding them to CRUKS eliminates the possibility of problem gambling exacerbating the issue. Previous mechanisms for authorised guardians to do so have been deemed ineffective and legally cumbersome, the KSA added.

Complaints about the process highlighted an unnecessary volume of evidence to prove that problem gambling is taking place and that it has caused damage, together with slow processing times.

Now, the KSA has m..

Read more

Gambling Commission data shows spike in UK black market VPN use after Online Safety Act

An update from the Gambling Commission has suggested that there are no real patterns for consumer engagement with illegal gambling sites – but hundreds of millions of minutes are being racked up on there every month.

Data also suggests a huge increase in consumers using VPNs to access these sites since the Online Safety Act came into force in July 2025.

A blog post from Tim Livesley, Head of the Data Innovation Hub at the Gambling Commission, has revealed fresh insight into how the regulator is tracking illegal gambling activity and the challenges it faces in measuring it accurately.

Speaking following the Commission’s Spring Evidence Conference in Birmingham, Livesley outlined both recent trends and ongoing efforts to refine the regulator’s methodology.

The latest analysis, extending trend data through February 2026, suggests that engagement continues to fluctuate rather than follow a clear upward or seasonal pattern, but shows just how prevalent illegal operators consistently a..

Read more

Romanian authority preps €5m to combat problem gambling

Romania will release a total of €5m (£4.3m) in grants to fight problem gambling through funding from the regulator, the ONJN.

The funding is being released under the National Public Interest Programme ‘Conscious and Free’ under a commitment made by the ONJN and published in the Official Gazette in December 2025.

Grants will come in the form of non-reimbursable financing for non-profit activities, taken directly from ONJN’s 2026 budget intended for the promotion of socially responsible gambling.

Funding will be structured into three pillars. The lion’s share of it – €3.6m – will be released for prevention and education, protection of minors, treatment and counselling, research, digitalisation, and promotion of responsible gambling.

A total of €1.2m will be allocated to the creation or expansion of specialised treatment centres, which can only be claimed by public authorities.

Lastly, the remainder of €200,000 will subsidise studies and impact assessments to help inform future publi..

Read more

Gambling Commission hits back at ‘inaccurate’ risk check criticism

The UK’s Gambling Commission (GC) has defended its proposed financial risk assessments (FRAs), pushing back against mounting criticism from industry stakeholders who warn the measures could drive customers to the black market.

Debates around FRAs have continued to spiral in what has been a hectic recent period for the UK’s gambling industry, which has also been hampered by the recent increase in Remote Gaming Duty (RGD) tax to 40%.

In a detailed update, Helen Rhodes, the regulator’s Director of Major Policy Projects and Evaluation, said the checks are designed to identify high-spending customers in financial difficulty, rather than introduce affordability limits or spending caps.

The proposals stem from the 2023 Gambling Act review White Paper and have been incessantly backed by the UK government. Affordability was a defining topic of the 2020-2023 Gambling Act review, and FRAs were the touted solution in the April 2023 White Paper.

Gambling Commission to only target 3%

According ..

Read more

KSA releases fresh wave of subsidies to fight gambling harm

Kansspelautoriteit (KSA), the Dutch gambling authority, has divested more funds into the reduction of problem gambling in the Netherlands.

A total of five new projects have been announced as the recipients of grants from the KSA’s Addiction Prevention Fund. This aids the treatment and prevention of gambling-related harm among the Dutch population – 20% of which is currently at a moderate to high risk of harmful behaviour, according to the regulator.

One grant will go to the Anonymous Gamblers Foundation (AGOG), a support group for compulsive gamblers, for the training of new counsellors. Additionally, AGOG will further explore the idea of launching digital counselling aimed at residents living in areas where on-site meetings are not possible.

The Dutch Association for Psychiatry (NVvP) is another grant recipient under the Addiction Prevention Fund, which will be used to create specialised guidelines for treating gambling disorders.

As the NVvP currently informs mental health profes..

Read more

Gambling reformer Noyes flip-flops on another pet project following flawed rollout of affordability checks

Prominent reformist figurehead Dr James Noyes has urged the Department of Culture, Media and Sport “to hit pause” on the use of financial risk checks on gambling.

A senior advisor of cross-party think tank the Social Market Foundation (SMF), Noyes has raised direct concerns to DCMS Secretary Lisa Nandy over the transparency and effectiveness of the pilot scheme that has been rolled out by the Gambling Commission.

Dr James Noyes: SMF

Noyes is a vocal former supporter of affordability checks during the long-running Gambling Act review consultation. He is now warning that the current implementation risks are drifting away from its original intent of being “frictionless” and proportionate, as set out in the review’s White Paper in April 2023.

“Despite the White Paper’s claim that financial risk checks would be frictionless, recent reports suggest that the opposite is the case,” Noyes wrote, adding that he is seeing “increasing reports that the pilot scheme has involved inconsistent dat..

Read more

Curaçao gambling authority’s integrity questioned following Novatech’s Dutch dispute

A national media outlet in Curaçao has begun to question the country’s gambling regulations following the Netherlandse Loterij’s legal pursuit of Novatech-owned Qbet.

It comes as the Nederlandse Loterij labelled the operator, based and licensed in Curaçao, as “the largest illegal gambling site” in the Netherlands. It also follows a plethora of fines handed out in the Netherlands and across Europe to Curaçao-headquartered operators.

Many Curaçao-licensed firms, like Stake, Santeda International and the aforementioned Novatech, have seen their names crop up in regulatory announcements on multiple occasions. The latter two also operate a myriad of subsidiaries which have either been the subject of fines or scrutiny due to lax security rules or operating in countries where not permitted to.

This has now begun to alarm the country’s media, which has started to raise concerns about the Curaçao Gaming Authority (CGA). An op-ed in the Curaçao Chronicle, penned by an anonymous author, read: ..

Read more

Bookmakers’ Association grows impatient with South Africa’s black market enforcement

South Africa’s regulatory fragmentation is not the primary cause of black market growth, according to Sean Coleman, but provincial structures “do have an undeniable part to play”.

Speaking to SBC News regarding the country’s struggles to contain illegal gambling, the South African Bookmakers’ Association (SABA) Chief Executive Officer pointed instead to national shortcomings.

He argued that enforcement sits “squarely in the domain and legal framework” of the National Gambling Board (NGB), but that the body is currently under-equipped to deal with the scale of the problem.

Sean Coleman

This came after a recent YieldSec study, which found that 62% of gambling activity in South Africa came via unlicensed sites that are not regulated in the country.

“There are inefficient, lacking resources and skill sets to deal with the illegal market,” Coleman said.

“Industry is wanting and willing to make this happen. Despite our offers, we have yet to be approached.”

He referenced the Gauteng r..

Read more

Lula wants PT lieutenants aligned on Bets crackdown

In Brazil, senior figures within the PT government are aligning with the President’s push to significantly restrict online gambling, signalling a potential shift away from the current framework of the Bets Law (PL 2626/2023).

Another week of politicking has witnessed President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva once again target online gambling licences, framing the sector as a growing threat to Brazilian society and economic stability.

Speaking to broadcaster ICL, Lula delivered his strongest remarks yet, stating that he “would shut down bookmakers entirely if the decision were mine alone.”

Criticism of the Bets regime has become a central theme of Lula’s political messaging ahead of the 4 October election.

Yet the liabilities of the Bets regime offer a convenient deflection for Lula as the administration grapples with a broad range of economic challenges.

On the campaign front, Lula has yet to answer solutions for challenges ranging from public debt and inflation to cost-of-living con..

Read more

Nederlandse Loterij to bring down Novatech by all means necessary

National lottery provider and the biggest gambling operator in the Netherlands, Nederlandse Loterij, has issued a notice that it will seek its legal rights against operator Qbet and all connected entities behind it.

Qbet, owned by Novatech together with 55Bet, another illegal entity targeting Dutch consumers, was labeled as “the largest illegal gambling site” in the Netherlands by Nederlandse Loterij.

As such, the licensed operator announced that it will seek to permanently bring down Qbet and the larger chain of command by leveraging all legal measures it has at its disposal.

A similar lawsuit, again by Nederlandse Loterij, was launched against Lalabet in 2025, which was the first such at this scale. Hearings in that case are currently taking place at The Hague.

It would be interesting to see how the latest case with Novatech develops, as the company is licensed in Curaçao, and although it is an autonomous nation under the Dutch Crown, the legal systems of both Curaçao and the Net..

Read more