View the latest odds and bet online legally, securely, and easily with the top rated sportsbook. Place a bet now! Tests by LSR reveal that, as of October 18, DraftKings is not fully blocking players located in Nevada from entering real-money contests despite an order from regulators requiring DFS sites to cease operations in the state.
[toc]UPDATE 10/21: We are no longer able to access DraftKings from Nevada under the conditions described below.
UPDATE 10/18 9:11 PM PDT: We are still able to enter new real-money contests while located in Nevada under the conditions described below.
UPDATE 10/18 3:53 PM PDT: DraftKings has issued a statement regarding their approach to blocking play in Nevada.
Tests by LSR reveal that, as of October 18, DraftKings is not fully blocking players located in Nevada from entering real-money contests despite an order from regulators requiring DFS sites to cease operations in the state.
Meanwhile, operators including FanDuel and StarsDraftblocked our identical attempts at entering real-money contests while located in Nevada.
Nevada Gaming Control Board Chairman A.G. Burnett told LSR via email that “we are aware of this and the matter is being looked into by the GCB Enforcement Division.”
“We have been doing our own testing as well,” Burnett continued. “If the decision is made to prosecute, the potential exists for both felony and misdemeanor violations. We will consult with our counsel at the Nevada Attorney General’s Office. ”
The implication is that anyone physically located in Nevada can still play for real money on DraftKings as long as the mailing address listed on their account is from another state (excluding other blocked states).
We were asked to confirm via a check-box that we were “not a resident” of Arizona, Iowa, Louisiana, Montana, Nevada, or Washington State. We checked the box. No further verification occurred.
Our results seem at odds with a statement from DraftKings on October 15 regarding the company’s position on serving customers in Nevada:
Unfortunately, we now have to temporarily disable our product for our thousands of customers in Nevada in order to be compliant in all jurisdictions.
Our results appear to directly clash with a description of DraftKings’ “sophisticated methods” for identifying user location that a company spokesperson provided to LSR on October 16:
We are able to track location a variety of ways and have sophisticated methods both internally and via third parties to ensure we are complying with the law in all jurisdictions. Some of these tools include IP tracking, verification through payment methods and GPS tracking on mobile devices. Our fraud team explores all incidents.
But our ability to enter new contests despite the ban appears to generally confirm what a DraftKings employee told players on TwoPlusTwo last year regarding the company’s approach to identifying a user’s location (emphasis ours):
You will not be able to use the mobile app to make financial transactions or deposit with paypal on the website but every other function of the site works based on your established residence.
DraftKings does appear to restrict accounts with a mailing address located in Nevada from entering new real-money contests.
And that restriction appears limited to the account itself and not the IP address or any other identifying characteristic connected to the user or their device.
“Regulators (or perhaps prosecutors) will certainly want to know how many Nevada residents played in DraftKings contests since Friday,” gaming attorney Daniel Wallach said after reviewing our test. “That will go a long way to determining whether any criminal charges are brought.”
The failure of DraftKings to identify our location “raises questions about the efficacy of other internal controls and safeguards,” Wallach said.
We conducted an identical test at FanDuel and StarsDraft on October 17.
Both sites immediately recognized our location within Nevada and explicitly prohibited us from entering real-money contests.
Both sites identified our location as a blocked or prohibited location in the message explaining why we were prohibited from entering real-money contests.
We did not test additional sites. It is possible that DraftKings is not alone in its approach to blocking activity in Nevada.
These are the key takeaways:
The failure of a daily fantasy sports site to employ sophisticated location identification software represents a unique threat in Nevada.
State regulators are well-versed in the issue of location verification thanks to the Nevada’s regulated online poker and mobile sports betting products.
LSR spoke with several people familiar with the situation who asserted that most major daily fantasy sports operators do not deploy geolocation tools that rise to the level of sophistication and accuracy of the geolocation tools utilized by state-regulated online poker or sports betting providers.
Gus Fritschie, the CTO of SeNet International, a firm that focuses on gaming security, to LSR that based on the brief tests he performed “it appears likely that it would be possible to enter contests on sites that are only performing IP-based geolocation by utilizing a proxy service such as Tor or other IP spoofing techniques.”
“In order to comply with state restrictions the sites need to employ robust geolocation services that go beyond just IP data as in regulated jurisdictions such as Nevada and New Jersey,” Fritschie added.
From the outside, we’re left to guess.
All we know for sure is that DraftKings is not blocking us from entering new-real money contests when we’re clearly located in Nevada.
Based on feedback and commentary from various sources, DraftKings appears to focus their location identification efforts on a few points:
That combination would fall far short of the geolocation technology employed by regulated online poker operators in New Jersey or Nevada.
DraftKings released the following statement to LSR at 3PM PDT on October 18:
On Friday 10/16 we notified all Nevada customers of the issue and requested that they withdraw all funds and close their accounts. We also implemented blocking mechanisms for Nevada residents from creating new accounts, depositing money or playing new games. Because our game is nuanced in the fact that we allow late swaps we allowed players who had already entered games on Thursday to be able to continue their full experience with the product until games close and are paid out on Monday regardless of their location.
I have requested clarification on how we were able to enter new contests while located in Nevada as recently as Sunday, October 18 at 9pm PDT — two days after the threshold described above.
I have also requested clarification if “blocking mechanisms” are intended for:
We have hit the homestretch of 2019. A new year awaits.
It is a time to look ahead, to make resolutions, to leave the past in the past and move forward.
For some, however, simply putting 2019 in the rearview is not enough; they want to go out with a bang.
Turn back the clock to summer 2019, when Legal Sports Reportcaught wind of DraftKings standing on the threshold of a monumental deal.
Now, six months later, that deal has come to fruition.
The daily fantasy sports and sports betting power announced that it was entering into “a definitive business combination agreement” with betting technology provider SBTech and special purpose acquisition company Diamond Eagle Acquisition Corp.
Diamond Eagle already operates as a publicly traded group. Under this deal, Diamond Eagle would take on the DraftKings’ name. As such, DraftKings will become a publicly traded company.
This merger creates the only vertically integrated sports betting and online gaming company in the United States. DraftKings Sportsbook is obviously a major player in the sports betting world with operations open in four states; SBTech has partnerships in five states. DraftKings currently leverages Kambi Group to develop its sports betting platform, but SBTech now provides the company with an in-house solution.
The deal is expected to close in the first half of 2020.
For those who thought the Nevada sports betting industry would take a hit because other states were coming online: Think again.
The Silver State took in $614.1 million in wagers during November. It was not only a state record for that specific month but also a state record for any month in Nevada and national legalized sports betting history.
In fact, in no other month prior has a state sports betting industry exceeded $600 million in handle. The previous best for Nevada was $596.8 million, set in March 2019.
This data shows that Nevada remains a heavy hitter amid the ever-expanding world of regulated sports betting. Boasting Las Vegas as a destination certainly helps, as does the existence of online wagering. That said, other states have instituted better and easier ways for users to sign up for betting apps.
That at least cracks the door open enough for New Jersey and Pennsylvania, each of which features an online market that accounts for more than 84% of their respective state handles.
As states continue to introduce and pass legislation legalizing sports betting, one Congressman has turned his focus toward Native American tribes.
Rep. Anthony Brindisi, from New York, has introduced bill HR 5502, which aims to “remove Federal barriers regarding the offering of mobile sports wagers on Indian lands when the applicable State and Indian Tribe have reached an agreement, and for other purposes.”
While not necessarily needed for tribes to offer online sports betting, it would help clear the air. For example, there is the belief that the federal Indian Gaming Regulatory Act mandates that mobile wagering could only occur via servers existing on tribal lands.
This new legislation, however, would help eliminate such confusion. Per the bill, a wager occurs entirely on tribal lands if:
New York does not have online wagering available, although stakeholders remain persistent in correcting that; the state does feature retail sportsbooks run by tribes. Tribes also operate brick-and-mortars in Oregon, New Mexico and Mississippi, and Michigan just legalized sports betting that would become available at 23 tribal casinos.