Can anything stop the UIGEA
The bill to ban online gambling - the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act (UIGEA), rocked the online poker world when it was introduced in late 2006. Although many online poker players felt the bill would not be able to impose a total ban on Internet gambling, it did do damage to the industry. The year before the ban was implemented, approximately 2,500 Internet gambling sites made about $15 billion dollars from online casino games, online betting, and online poker. But - after President Bush signed the UIGEA into place, the business dropped about 50%. Can anything stop the UIGEA? Congressman Barney Frank, a democrat from Massachusetts and Ron Paul, a republican from Texas, certainly hope so. They introduced a bill on April 10th that would stop the government from putting into place the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act (UIGEA). H.R. 5767 specifically says that the Treasury and the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System would be forbidden from ‘proposing, prescribing, or implementing any regulation that requires the financial services industry to identify and block internet gambling transactions.’ Frank and Paul say that their push behind the bill is the idea that the federal government should not be able to legislate morality. They also think that the government does not have the ability to identify and stop all the transactions between what the UIGEA refers to as *illegal Internet gambling* companies and U.S. players. One problem for the government is that many of these companies are on foreign soil. Despite the ban - by some estimates, there are approximately 1,000,000 people gambling online at any given moment. Until the ban is fully implemented or someone comes up with a compromise the government will accept, the Internet poker world will try to come up with ways to continue to serve its poker players.