Get A Grip: The Week In Sports Betting: In CT, Looks Like Wait Till Next Year, More
Rhode Island has slashed its sports betting projections, and media companies are making sports betting plays.
Rhode Island has slashed its sports betting projections, and media companies are making sports betting plays.
Passed version of HB 1 raises the tax rate to 20 percent and requires the use of official league data.
The sportsbook owner claims the operator perpetrated fraud and misrepresented its ownership stake in the BetLucky sports betting app.
Minnesota tribes oppose mobile sports betting of any kind, suggesting that the luxury of betting from your couch will do damage to their casinos.
Pennsylvania sportsbooks double handle in January vs. December, but adding a mobile component will likely make those numbers explode.
Despite concerns about in-person registration and offering a monopoly to the Twin River Corporation, the Rhode Island Senate approved a measure to legalize mobile sports betting.
While a large number of U.S. states appear eager to adopt mobile sports betting bills, a small faction could limit consumers from betting on smartphones.
Rhode Island lawmakers and industry representatives call in-person registration a deterrent, and suggest the state should revisit its sports betting tax structure for mobile products.
In 2019, lawmakers appear to better understand that creating a business-friendly sports betting business climate will net the highest revenue.
A pair of companion bills to authorize mobile sports betting platforms in the state of Mississippi both died in committee, but lawmakers likely will renew efforts.
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