Australian watchdog is targeting gambling affiliate websites

The current condition of gaming in Australia gives the ACMA the authority to prevent websites from violating gambling regulations that originate outside of Australia and throughout the country. Back in 2017, the ACMA said that it intended to be more severe on the 2001 Interactive Gambling Act’s online casino ban, employing harsh penalties as a deterrence. The illicit gambling websites were no longer accessible to users as of November 2019, when the country gaming regulators blocked them.

A website must break the restrictions in the Interactive Gambling Act of 2001 in order to be worthy of blocking. Thus, their whereabouts will no longer be known, and they will be continuously tracked. The Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) recently revealed plans to use a new method of banning illicit internet gambling by disrupting the operations of online casino-type businesses.

According to the investigation, a number of these sites have been observed to hide their objectives by portraying themselves as completely neutral reviewers.

The ACMA commented that it had ordered Australian Internet Service Providers (ISPs) to prohibit specified affiliate sites, and gave a list of seven sites that had been restricted.

Australian Communications and Media Authority Authority Member Fiona Cameron claims that marketing websites can steer you to illegitimate gaming services that don’t have the same protections as licenced and regulated businesses.

“Prizes are rarely paid out, although incentives and pressure techniques are commonly used.”

The ACMA’s authority in addressing offshore gambling has grown since the Interactive Gaming Act of Australia was revised in 2017 to address a number of loopholes that were previously abused. There are strict restrictions prohibiting the use of internet slots, casino games, and poker. Violators face significant fines.

The ACMA made a significant announcement in 2017: over 279 illicit gambling websites were blacklisted, with 144 of them having left the blacklist.

As a result, the country’s ISPs were directed to block all websites related to the aforementioned Australian websites, which includes Australia OK Casinos, Aussie Online Pokies, Pokies, Australian Gambling, and True Blue Casinos.

The Australian Communications and Media Authority claimed these websites were claiming to be impartial reviews of gambling services, which placed the blocking of the websites at the top of the agency’s to-do list.