This. This a hundred times. I hate pop up ads, and these are the most common ones.gigastar said:Oh, good now i might get less ad spam from them.
Burn in hell! [sub]Whoever you are...[/sub]
This. This a hundred times. I hate pop up ads, and these are the most common ones.gigastar said:Oh, good now i might get less ad spam from them.
Burn in hell! [sub]Whoever you are...[/sub]
It already has: Baxter vs United States (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_E._Baxter_Jr._vs._the_United_States). I'm not going to get an argument with you over whether it's skill or not, but the US has already ruled that it is skill. There you go.Proteus214 said:Poker is not a game of skill, it is still a game of chance. Being skilled at poker has to do with knowing when to take a chance and how much of a chance you should take. Online poker as far as I'm concerned is just a game of chance. That argument will never hold up
The insane thing is that online poker literally pulls in billions of dollars a year. Several Senators have tried to legalize and regulate it in order to tax the companies and get pieces of that money. Instead, the US decides to spend a few million in order to charge these guys. It's insane. There's literally money right there in front of them, and they choose to ignore it.Mackheath said:Its because America is a nation of greedy bastards; they'll take the money without nary a question as long as its a big enough sum. Which leads to my guess that these CEO's have pissed off the wrong person or something, rather than finally being hammered for a law that is-quite frankly- more hinderance than help.Andy Chalk said:It's a pretty fine line and I never really understood how the spirit of the law could be so openly flouted, even though the law itself always struck me as a little silly, but I guess it just took awhile for the powers that be to get around to dropping the hammer.
I approve of this videoOrcus The Ultimate said:This is one of those moments where you must have the right man at the right time, in order to pronounce the EPIC stuff:
The Court in Baxter only ruled that it is a game of skill for the purpose of calculating the federal taxes you have to pay on the winnings. That is, you can treat playing poker as a business and deduct your business overheads and losses to offset the federal taxes you pay on your winnings. But in terms of regulation, poker is still a game of chance and therefore subject to all the regulation that all other forms of gambling are subject.The Bandit said:It already has: Baxter vs United States (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_E._Baxter_Jr._vs._the_United_States). I'm not going to get an argument with you over whether it's skill or not, but the US has already ruled that it is skill. There you go.Proteus214 said:Poker is not a game of skill, it is still a game of chance. Being skilled at poker has to do with knowing when to take a chance and how much of a chance you should take. Online poker as far as I'm concerned is just a game of chance. That argument will never hold up
The insane thing is that online poker literally pulls in billions of dollars a year. Several Senators have tried to legalize and regulate it in order to tax the companies and get pieces of that money. Instead, the US decides to spend a few million in order to charge these guys. It's insane. There's literally money right there in front of them, and they choose to ignore it.Mackheath said:Its because America is a nation of greedy bastards; they'll take the money without nary a question as long as its a big enough sum. Which leads to my guess that these CEO's have pissed off the wrong person or something, rather than finally being hammered for a law that is-quite frankly- more hinderance than help.Andy Chalk said:It's a pretty fine line and I never really understood how the spirit of the law could be so openly flouted, even though the law itself always struck me as a little silly, but I guess it just took awhile for the powers that be to get around to dropping the hammer.
The issue raised was whether or not the US has ruled poker as a game a skill. Either it is or it isn't. It doesn't matter in what area. It can't be a game of skill at one point because of this law and not at another point because of a separate law. Whether the Baxter case is relevant to this case is an entirely separate issue.JDKJ said:The Court in Baxter only ruled that it is a game of skill for the purpose of calculating the federal taxes you have to pay on the winnings. That is, you can treat playing poker as a business and deduct your business overheads and losses to offset the federal taxes you pay on your winnings. But in terms of regulation, poker is still a game of chance and therefore subject to all the regulation that all other forms of gambling are subject.The Bandit said:It already has: Baxter vs United States (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_E._Baxter_Jr._vs._the_United_States). I'm not going to get an argument with you over whether it's skill or not, but the US has already ruled that it is skill. There you go.Proteus214 said:Poker is not a game of skill, it is still a game of chance. Being skilled at poker has to do with knowing when to take a chance and how much of a chance you should take. Online poker as far as I'm concerned is just a game of chance. That argument will never hold up
The insane thing is that online poker literally pulls in billions of dollars a year. Several Senators have tried to legalize and regulate it in order to tax the companies and get pieces of that money. Instead, the US decides to spend a few million in order to charge these guys. It's insane. There's literally money right there in front of them, and they choose to ignore it.Mackheath said:Its because America is a nation of greedy bastards; they'll take the money without nary a question as long as its a big enough sum. Which leads to my guess that these CEO's have pissed off the wrong person or something, rather than finally being hammered for a law that is-quite frankly- more hinderance than help.Andy Chalk said:It's a pretty fine line and I never really understood how the spirit of the law could be so openly flouted, even though the law itself always struck me as a little silly, but I guess it just took awhile for the powers that be to get around to dropping the hammer.
Greedy children of illegitimate parentage we may be, but money is almost certainly not a motivator here. while $3 billion is far far more than you or I will ever see, it hardly even qualifies as pocket change to a Federal government with a budget in the Trillions. What's far more likely is that the FBI was merely biding their time until they had an airtight case. That's their typical MO: once they suspect you of something, they get warrants which allow them to place you under surveillance and then wait, hopefully giving you enough rope to hang yourself in the process.Mackheath said:Its because America is a nation of greedy bastards; they'll take the money without nary a question as long as its a big enough sum. Which leads to my guess that these CEO's have pissed off the wrong person or something, rather than finally being hammered for a law that is-quite frankly- more hinderance than help.
I'm assuming that you and your friend are UK nationals, in which case y'all probably have nothing to worry about.UtopiaV1 said:A mate of mine works for PokerStars, I hope he's okay, he's just out of uni and trying to pay off its substantial debts... as am I!!!
Anyway, everyone knows PKR is the best online poker game
Because the government doesn't get its cut from taxes on online gambling like it does regular gambling.Wolfram01 said:It's illegal to gamble online in USA?!
That's a wierd one.
Anyway... so long, suckers!
That holds true only if you play poker for one hand and leave. It's impossible to win every time, but if you know what you're doing you can consistently come out on top. I played for free at Full Tilt Poker (for "Play Money", which has no actual value and is just there for bragging rights or whatever) and I worked my way up from 1000 chips (what you start with) to over 200 000. What am I, the luckiest guy on the internet?Proteus214 said:Poker is not a game of skill, it is still a game of chance. Being skilled at poker has to do with knowing when to take a chance and how much of a chance you should take.
I'll agree that it is incorrect to categorically state that poker, as a matter of law, is a game of chance. The Baxter case proves that statement wrong. But, as a matter of law, it is also possible for it to be a game of chance in one area of the law and a game of skill in another area of the law. That's how the decision of a court can, in fact, work.The Bandit said:The issue raised was whether or not the US has ruled poker as a game a skill. Either it is or it isn't. It doesn't matter in what area. It can't be a game of skill at one point because of this law and not at another point because of a separate law. Whether the Baxter case is relevant to this case is an entirely separate issue.JDKJ said:The Court in Baxter only ruled that it is a game of skill for the purpose of calculating the federal taxes you have to pay on the winnings. That is, you can treat playing poker as a business and deduct your business overheads and losses to offset the federal taxes you pay on your winnings. But in terms of regulation, poker is still a game of chance and therefore subject to all the regulation that all other forms of gambling are subject.The Bandit said:It already has: Baxter vs United States (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_E._Baxter_Jr._vs._the_United_States). I'm not going to get an argument with you over whether it's skill or not, but the US has already ruled that it is skill. There you go.Proteus214 said:Poker is not a game of skill, it is still a game of chance. Being skilled at poker has to do with knowing when to take a chance and how much of a chance you should take. Online poker as far as I'm concerned is just a game of chance. That argument will never hold up
The insane thing is that online poker literally pulls in billions of dollars a year. Several Senators have tried to legalize and regulate it in order to tax the companies and get pieces of that money. Instead, the US decides to spend a few million in order to charge these guys. It's insane. There's literally money right there in front of them, and they choose to ignore it.Mackheath said:Its because America is a nation of greedy bastards; they'll take the money without nary a question as long as its a big enough sum. Which leads to my guess that these CEO's have pissed off the wrong person or something, rather than finally being hammered for a law that is-quite frankly- more hinderance than help.Andy Chalk said:It's a pretty fine line and I never really understood how the spirit of the law could be so openly flouted, even though the law itself always struck me as a little silly, but I guess it just took awhile for the powers that be to get around to dropping the hammer.
But, there can be no argument that the US has ruled poker as a game of skill.
Be nice if they'd take out bankers, oil companies, insurance companies, and Zynga.archabaddon said:Simple really - a cash-strapped government is going after obvious, law-breaking targets that bring in a lot of money. Certainly just a drop in the bucket as far as the US deficit is concerned, but every penny helps.Andy Chalk said:It's a pretty fine line and I never really understood how the spirit of the law could be so openly flouted, even though the law itself always struck me as a little silly, but I guess it just took awhile for the powers that be to get around to dropping the hammer.