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telecom blocking: What is the plan?

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  1. Michael
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    Hey - got wind of the telecom blocking order by the State on 2+2. So what is the plan? Where do we start in getting this stopped?

    The Minnesota Department of Public Safety (DPS) Alcohol and Gambling Enforcement Division (AGED) today announced that it has served written notice to 11 national and regional telephone and Internet service providers (ISPs) instructing them to prohibit access of all Minnesota-based computers to nearly 200 online gambling websites. Online gambling is illegal in all U.S. states.

    Written notice was served to AT&T Internet Services, San Antonio; Charter Communications, St. Louis; Comcast Cable, Moorestown, N.J.; Direct TV, Los Angeles; Dish Network, Englewood., Colo.; Embarq and Sprint/Nextel, both of Overland Park, Kan.; Frontier Communications, Stamford, Conn.; Qwest, Denver; Verizon Wireless, Bedminster, N.J.; and Wildblue Communications, Greenwood Village, Colo.

    “We are putting site operators and Minnesota online gamblers on notice and in advance,” says John Willems, director of AGED. “Disruption of these sites’ cash flow will negatively impact their business models. State residents with online escrow accounts should be aware that access to their accounts may be jeopardized and their funds in peril.”

    Believed the first attempt by a state to employ this federal statute to restrict access to online gambling sites, the letters cites U.S. Code, Title 18, Section 1084, (d); notices were delivered Mon., April 27. Congress enacted the statute in 1961 in recognition of the need for states to control illegal gambling activities and granted authority for use of the statue to state law enforcement agencies.

    Response from the notified ISPs is expected within two to three weeks, at which time issues of non-compliance will be referred to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). Acknowledging the effort as an initial sample, Willems anticipates the program expanding to address thousands of sites, depending on compliance. He notes that the required technology to restrict geographic access to particular sites is a relatively straightforward procedure on the part of service providers.

    In the written notices, AGED also provided the sites’ telephone numbers and requested access to those numbers by Minnesotans to be prohibited. For more than two decades, telecoms have shut down telephone numbers at the request of law enforcement agencies when believed to be involved in illegal activities, such as sports book-making telephone numbers.

    “In Minnesota, and for Minnesotans, the primary issues are legality, state self-governance and accountability,” says Willems. “In broader context, the long-running debate on online gambling continues to raise significant issues, including absence of policy and regulation, individual rights, societal impact, international fair-trade practices, and funding for criminal and terrorist organizations.”

    Beeker

    Posted 1 year ago #
  2. Skallagrim
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    The Plan?

    We will fight them on the beaches, we will fight them in the streets, we will fight them in the hills ....

    Stay tuned for full details.

    Skallagrim

    Posted 1 year ago #
  3. Michael
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    Alright Skall! Now we are talking. Keep us posted.

    Beeker

    Posted 1 year ago #
  4. Ed Champion
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    Personally I would love to sue the phone company if they block my playing on any poker forum. I play every day. Always play for free and have not yet made a deposit. If they block that I would love to make it as stick as I can for them. With PPA's support of course.

    Posted 1 year ago #
  5. Shane Dubble
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    NH BRA, LLC. (www.nhbra.com) operates servers in Minnesota that monitor the traffic and revenue of online poker. This ban unfairly targets this perfectly legal business activity and would force the business completely out-of-state... all when the focus of lawmakers should be on incubating such businesses to grow high-tech jobs.

    Posted 1 year ago #
  6. Jim Paine
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    I live in Colorado, and Qwest is my ISP. This morning I was unable to log on to Absolute Poker (both the game and the website). I later discovered that I was also unable to get to Bodog and Ultimate Bet. I was, however, able to reach the websites of those poker rooms via anonymouse.org, and my access to the rest of the internet was problem-free. This went on for about an hour. Anybody else have similar problems? My theory is that Qwest was testing its block on those sites pending the Minnesota demand.

    Posted 1 year ago #
  7. Michael
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    Has their been any formal response yet from the ISP's? I see that IMEGA has already started working on their lawsuit (copied from 2+2 legislation forum - post by Engineer):

    April 29, 2009 - The Minnesota Department of Public Safety (DPS), through its Alcohol and Gambling Enforcement Division (AGED), has ordered Internet service providers to block state residents’ access to 200 Internet gambling Web sites. Minnesota referenced a Federal law, the Wire Act of 1961, for justification of its order to the ISPs, claiming the law made “online gambling is illegal in all U.S. states.”
    The Interactive Media Entertainment & Gaming Association (iMEGA), which was alerted to the blocking order early this morning by a Minnesota reporter seeking comment , immediately set it’s legal team to work challenging the DPS order. iMEGA requested the list of the 200 “black listed” Web sites from DPS, but the request was denied on the advice of DPS counsel, which was apparently debating whether the black list would be made public.
    “Again, you have an example of state government exceeding their authority and operating in secret to deny citizens their freedom to use the Internet as they see fit in the privacy of their own homes,” said Joe Brennan Jr., chairman of iMEGA. “What is most concerning is the shaky legal pretext that Minnesota has used to fashion their order. There is simply no Federal law that exists that makes it illegal for all US citizens to gamble on the Internet. None.”
    The Wire Act of 1961 made it a criminal offense to use telephones or telegraphs to transmit wagers. Though the US Congress has taken the matter up a number of times, it has never amended the law to include Internet gambling. However, the US Department of Justice has broadly interpreted the Wire Act to proscecute individuals connected to Internet gambling operations in other countries.
    A press release from DPS noted that this may only be the beginning of their efforts to block Minnesota residents from accessing certain Website content deemed “illegal” by the state agency, according to DPS director John Willems.
    “Acknowledging the effort as an initial sample, Willems anticipates the program expanding to address thousands of sites, depending on compliance. He notes that the required technology to restrict geographic access to particular sites is a relatively straightforward procedure on the part of service providers.”
    iMEGA and its legal team, fresh from their Court of Appeals victory blocking the Commonwealth of Kentucky from seizing 141 Internet gambling-related domain names, expressed concern that DPS was signaling a new form of government censorship that would stretch well beyond the Internet gambling sector.
    “When Mr. Wilhelm expresses his intention to extend his ‘program’ to thousands of other sites, just what kind of sites will he be targeting?” Brennan asked. “And will he be making the determination which sites are ‘legal’ and which are ‘illegal’? Because as far as we can tell, there is nothing in Minnesota or US Federal law that makes these gaming or any other sites illegal, just their opinion.”

    Posted 1 year ago #
  8. Ken Sarnoski
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    Guys and Gals,

    If anyone here is having problems logging in, please let me know, I have a few questions to ask you.

    Thanks!

    Posted 1 year ago #
  9. Michael
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    I'm playing on Full Tilt tonight with no issues. Will post if I get blocked. Provider is Charter.

    Posted 1 year ago #
  10. Paul Ruginis
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    Department of Public Safety? Are you kidding me? Yeah, let's go after those damn poker players and stop them from playing the great American pastime game of poker online! Let the murders, rapists, and drug dealers run free! Where are our government's priorities, more specifically, Minnesota's government's priorities? This is highly disturbing.

    Posted 1 year ago #

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