Danik wrote:Again you make my point : its 'illegal' in the USA and thats it. Its not illegal in the countries in which the sites are based. You continue to miss the point that the internet is global but jurisdictions are local. You can google stuff in the USA that you are not permitted to see in China. So Google cannot operate the same way (if at all) in China. In the UK two 17yo's can marry, have kids, etc... but if they photograph their entirely legal loveplay and put it online.. they are child pornographers under many jurisdictions. Its daft on some levels but illustrates the hard point : there are few universal rules online but countless rules applied locally sometimes with great severity. If you run any kind of online presence then you have to consider a damn sight more than just what is allowed at home.
I'm fully aware of taking in to account laws of other nations, I have to consider it in my real job. Can you provide a country (and the subsequent laws used) that has banned the Assassin's Creed Game Franchise as a result of "gambling". Those games have internal mini-games that you can actually place bets on and result in winning and losing the in-game currency. The mini-games contained within are no different than what we are suggesting here.