Freerolls 24 Hours a Day!
Win real Cash & Prizes playing Free Poker Tournaments.  No buyins.  No monthly fees.  Absolutely free poker!

Watch Poker TV Shows Now
Hundreds of poker TV shows available to watch on your computer right now. Instant access.  Highest quality Poker TV.

Tired of Poker - Try Free Porn!
Watch over 100k adult videos absolutely free! No credit cards needed.  My Way Porn videos are 100% Free to watch!

Your Ad Here
Advertise your website or product here.  This is as targeted as you can get! Reach tens of thousands of poker enthusiasts now!


European Union and United States Reach Trade Agreement to Continue Ban of Online Gaming

December 17, 2007


[Content Disclosure: 100% Poker, 14% Fascism, 9% Stupidity]

The hope of many US poker players was that the huge compensation over the WTO trade ruling would force the Federal government to back off on the UIGEA. Well quietly today the EU and the US have agreed on a trade deal that will allow the United States to continue to block European gaming sites from soliciting customers using US based computers.

The European Union has accepted a compensation package the U.S. has offered, in response to its withdrawal from World Trade Organization (WTO) agreements on gambling and betting services. “A bilateral agreement was signed in Geneva, which provides EU service suppliers with new trade opportunities in the U.S. postal and courier, research and development, storage and warehouse sectors,” the Commission said. “The U.S. also made concessions in the testing and analysis services sector.”

The WTO ruled in 2005 that the U.S. gambling ban — which exempts certain domestic services, for online horse-racing — effectively discriminates against foreign companies seeking to offer similar services in the U.S. market.

The European Union said it will also “continue to press for non discriminatory treatment in U.S. internet gambling legislation.”

Meanwhile, a WTO decision on what sanctions the island nation of Antigua and Barbuda may impose on the U.S., over its refusal to allow U.S. citizens to gamble at foreign online casinos, has been delayed, Reuters reports.

Antigua has asked the WTO for permission to impose $3.44 billion in annual trade sanctions, while the U.S. says the country should be entitled to $500,000 in damages.

Comments

Got something to say?





Close
E-mail It