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the News desk.
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YouTubers fined over site that let children gamble using
coins on Fifa game |
08/02/17 |
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Editor |
Dylan Rigby
and Craig Douglas, also known as NepentheZ, admited breaching gambling rules
with FutGalaxy website
Two men who
admitted breaching gambling laws over a website that allowed children to bet on
Premier League football matches using a virtual currency earned in the video
game Fifa have been ordered to pay fines and costs.
Dylan Rigby, 33,
and Craig Douglas, 32, pleaded guilty to breaches of the 2005 Gambling Act
during a hearing at Birmingham magistrates court. Rigby was ordered to pay
fines and costs of £174,000, while Douglas, a professional YouTuber, must
pay £91,000.
The court heard that Douglas, known by the YouTube
alias NepentheZ, promoted to his more than 1 million subscribers the FutGalaxy
social gaming website, which had no age restrictions and allowed
minors to use a credit card to place bets in a virtual currency earned on Fifa.
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A court hearing on
Monday was told that the unregulated site generated pre-tax profit of about
£96,000 between July 2015 and February 2016. One 14-year-old boy lost
£586 in a day.
Rigby, of Colchester, Essex, and Douglas, of
Ferndown, Dorset, were fined £24,000 and £16,000 respectively by
the district judge, Jack McGarva, who said the men had not been honest about
their finances.
Ordering Rigby to pay prosecution costs of
£150,000 and Douglas £75,000, McGarva said: The aggravating
features of these offences are they were committed over a relatively long
period of about six months. Children were gambling on your site. Its
impossible for me to know how many or the effect on them.
In my
opinion, both of you were aware of the use of the site by children and the
attractiveness of it to children. At the very least, you both turned a blind
eye to it.
During the opening of the case, the court was shown a
video of Douglas from his YouTube channel saying to the camera: You
dont have to be 18 for this, because this is a virtual currency.
Douglas admitted a charge of being an officer of a company that
provided facilities for gambling without an operating licence and a further
allegation relating to the advertising of unlawful gambling. |
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Rigby admitted two
charges relating to the provision of facilities for gambling and a third
offence linked to advertising illegal gambling.
FutGalaxy took bets on
matches played in the UK, France, Germany and Italy.
Fifa players can
earn the virtual currency by winning matches and competitions in the
games ultimate team mode. The court heard that sites such as FutGalaxy
were parasitic for games including Fifa, which forbids players from
buying or selling virtual coins on black market websites.
Its
publisher, Electronic Arts, has banned tens of thousands of accounts for buying
and selling coins outside the game.
Gambling involving video game
currencies and virtual items has become a major enterprise. Last year it was
reported that the practice of gambling on in-game items in titles such as
Counter-Strike: Global Offensive could be worth more than $7bn (£5.6bn).
Philip Kolvin QC, prosecuting on behalf of the Gambling Commission,
said gaming, betting and lottery features were offered by FutGalaxy, which
evaded gambling regulations over a long period and had 1.4 million followers on
Twitter.
Stephen Walsh, defending, said Douglas earned a good
living as a YouTuber, lawfully promoting a wide range of other products.
They accept that there is a disparity between them, he
said. Mr Rigby accepts he was the prime mover and Mr Douglass role
was as an advertiser and a promoter.
Minutes after the fine was
issued, Douglas responded on Twitter:
NepentheZ : - "I owe a huge
apology to my family and close friends for putting them through this process,
and appreciate all those that stood by me." |
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