XiaNaphryz
LATIN, MATRIPEDICABUS, DO YOU SPEAK IT
http://www.wsj.com/articles/fbi-jus...aily-fantasy-sports-business-model-1444865627
I still think it's ludicrous that the law that brought down online poker in the US has an exemption for fantasy sports as "games of skill." Give me back my legal poker.
The U.S. Justice Department and the Federal Bureau of Investigation are probing whether the business model of daily fantasy sports operators violates federal law, according to people familiar with the matter.
FBI agents from the Boston office have been contacting customers of DraftKings Inc. to ask them about their experiences with the Boston-based company, one person familiar with the matter said.
The probe is in the preliminary stage, two people said. It is part of an ongoing discussion within the Justice Department about the legality of daily fantasy sites, in which customers pay entry fees to draft virtual sports teams that compete against each other for prize money based on the real-world performances of athletes. Congress in 2006 prohibited financial companies from transferring money to online gambling sites and several were shut down. But so-called games of skill were exempted. Fantasy sports sites have since operated under that exemption. So-called daily fantasy sites like DraftKings and FanDuel, Inc. didnt become popular until after the law was enacted.
The Justice Department is trying to determine whether daily fantasy games are a form of gambling that falls outside the purview of the exemption. No decision on the matter has been reached, these people said.
Hundreds of millions of dollars in venture capital and player money are flowing into the booming fantasy-sports industry, which counts sports leagues, Alphabet Inc.s investing arm, and major media companies such as Comcast Corp. and 21st Century Fox Inc. among its investors. Wall Street Journal-owner News Corp and 21st Century Fox were part of the same company until 2013. Walt Disney Co. earlier this year scuttled a planned investment in DraftKings, though the companies maintain a marketing relationship.
Daily fantasy came under scrutiny last week after a DraftKings employee admitted on a fantasy-sports message board last week that he had prematurely released sensitive data about the sites biggest contest. The same week, he won $350,000 on FanDuel, something both companies acknowledge. DraftKings said the leak was an accident, and both companies said he didnt benefit from having early access to data.
FanDuel has hired an outside investigator to conduct an internal review and make recommendations on how to strengthen controls on sensitive information. DraftKings has hired an investigator to look into unspecified allegations against an employee.
It is entirely predictable that the government would follow up on the misleading reports about our industry, a DraftKings spokeswoman said in a statement. We have no knowledge of the specifics of any federal investigation but strongly disagree with any notion that our company has engaged in any illegal activities.
FanDuel has said daily fantasy is a game of skill, not luck, and is therefore exempt under the 2006 law.
I still think it's ludicrous that the law that brought down online poker in the US has an exemption for fantasy sports as "games of skill." Give me back my legal poker.