These forums have been archived and are now read-only.

The new forums are live and can be found at https://forums.eveonline.com/

EVE General Discussion

 
  • Topic is locked indefinitely.
 

Gambling

First post
Author
Lucas Kell
Solitude Trading
S.N.O.T.
#41 - 2016-09-19 15:35:58 UTC
Cade Windstalker wrote:
It is not, otherwise every game that allows anything that might be construed as "Gambling" with an in-game resource would qualify as a gambling site. That CS:GO skins had real-world value and could be traded for real-world money makes them, in effect, poker chips.
It's not about it just being an in-game resource though, it's that that resource can be purchased with cash. If a game give you in-game tokens and you gamble with those in game tokens for more in-game tokens, that's fine. The moment you then start selling tokens for cash, regardless of whether or not they can be converted back to cash, you're into potential legal responsibilities, since regulation is there to protect people who may blow all of their money on gambling.

Cade Windstalker wrote:
Just because something has value to a person is not the same thing, legally speaking, as it having monetary value. CCP's TOS specifically states that you can't legally convert in-game items to money and doing so gets you banned.
Completely irrelevant. If I made a gambling site where you gamble tokens for non-refundable, non-transferable flight tickets, I'd need to be regulated. Whether or not something has value isn;t solely dependent on whether or not it can be converted back to cash.

Even if it were though, CCPs EULA is irrelevant to whether or not it can be converted. Again, imagine a normal gambling site where people buy tokens and gamble with them and can transfer them to each other, then they sell them to each other on ebay, but your TOS says "you're not allowed to sell them!". Of course that's not going to just bypass regulation because their TOS has that random clause. A TOS doesn't magically break your liability.

Cade Windstalker wrote:
The legislation these two are being charged under states, in Section 6.5 the following:

Quote:
(5)In this Act “prize” in relation to gaming (except in the context of a gaming machine)—

(a)means money or money's worth, and

(b)includes both a prize provided by a person organising gaming and winnings of money staked.


So yes, that the object in question is freely convertible into money is important and relevant, and similar US legislation includes similar stipulations.
At no point does that state that it needs to be able to be converted into money, it simply needs to be worth money, and ISK is worth money since you can buy it for money. Again, we're back to the idea that by providing a reward you can't sell on you can somehow sidestep the law. With ISK it's even more obvious than any other tokens too, since you can even use it to pay for services that would be paid for, not just subscription costs but event tickets to fanfest for example. There was even a time you could buy graphics cards with it. You'd have a hard time convincing a court that ISK was worth nothing.

The Indecisive Noob - EVE fan blog.

Wholesale Trading - The new bulk trading mailing list.

Lucas Kell
Solitude Trading
S.N.O.T.
#42 - 2016-09-19 15:38:28 UTC
Dirty Forum Alt wrote:
Incidentally...I never got into the steam market... But it was my understanding that you never actually got money out of it - you just got money in your steam wallet that you could spend on more games/skins/etc.

Was there actually a way to pull money out of the steam wallet back into RL cash?
Not AFAIK, you can buy games and stuff with it on steam is about it I think.

The Indecisive Noob - EVE fan blog.

Wholesale Trading - The new bulk trading mailing list.

Dan Seavey Allier
Seavy Acquisitions
#43 - 2016-09-19 20:05:14 UTC
Jonah Gravenstein wrote:
Zanar Skwigelf wrote:
Chopper Rollins wrote:

Anyone who touches gambling is a self-destructive idiot or a greedy idiot or both.




Or someone else who is ok with "spending" $50 on a few hours of entertainment on shiny lights and loud noises.

Your mindset is common among people who think the point of gambling is to make money. One look at the odds should be enough to know it's simply entertainment.
People with gambling problems tend to come from the poorest sectors of society, why is that?


Because there is a distinct parallel between a lack of education and poverty.
Not foreseeing consequences is a symptom of that.
Coupled with financial desperation, the sucker is born.

Gambling is predatory, and it hunts the poor.



Dan

Honey Never Sleeps. - John Russell

Cade Windstalker
#44 - 2016-09-19 20:36:29 UTC
Lucas Kell wrote:
It's not about it just being an in-game resource though, it's that that resource can be purchased with cash. If a game give you in-game tokens and you gamble with those in game tokens for more in-game tokens, that's fine. The moment you then start selling tokens for cash, regardless of whether or not they can be converted back to cash, you're into potential legal responsibilities, since regulation is there to protect people who may blow all of their money on gambling.


This is incorrect, it's not that the thing is purchased with money it's that it's freely convertible back into money.

These regulations are not, in fact, designed to prevent people from blowing all of their money gambling, they're designed to regulate gambling and confine it to certain laws and regulations. There is nothing in any gambling legislation that I'm aware of that requires the house to prevent someone from spending more than they can afford or do anything else to limit access to legal gambling.

Lucas Kell wrote:
Completely irrelevant. If I made a gambling site where you gamble tokens for non-refundable, non-transferable flight tickets, I'd need to be regulated. Whether or not something has value isn;t solely dependent on whether or not it can be converted back to cash.

Even if it were though, CCPs EULA is irrelevant to whether or not it can be converted. Again, imagine a normal gambling site where people buy tokens and gamble with them and can transfer them to each other, then they sell them to each other on ebay, but your TOS says "you're not allowed to sell them!". Of course that's not going to just bypass regulation because their TOS has that random clause. A TOS doesn't magically break your liability.


Yes, because those tickets have value in the legal definition of the term. If you made a site that charged for tokens but you couldn't convert them to anything then you wouldn't be operating a gambling establishment under the sort of legal definition being used here. That's because in the legal sense of the term the tokens don't have value. You have essentially bought the ability to play the game but nothing more.

Also yes, a TOS exists for the express purpose of mitigating the legal responsibility of the entity in question. The only reason the CS:GO lawsuit and other proceedings are happening is because the skins are effectively poker chips that have real-world monetary value and can be exchanged for money.

Lucas Kell wrote:
At no point does that state that it needs to be able to be converted into money, it simply needs to be worth money, and ISK is worth money since you can buy it for money. Again, we're back to the idea that by providing a reward you can't sell on you can somehow sidestep the law. With ISK it's even more obvious than any other tokens too, since you can even use it to pay for services that would be paid for, not just subscription costs but event tickets to fanfest for example. There was even a time you could buy graphics cards with it. You'd have a hard time convincing a court that ISK was worth nothing.


Thankfully this kind of pedantry with words doesn't really hold up in court. In short legally speaking ISK is not worth money any more than my Eve subscription is worth money. In the case of the subscription I'm paying for a non-transferable service. In the case of the ISK CCP expressly prohibits it from being exchanged for real world money. Legally speaking that is the definition of "value" because if I can't exchange something for money that thing is worthless to me.

Also you're conflating a few facts here. You could not, at any point, buy Fanfest tickets (or a graphics card) with ISK. You could buy them by trading in in-game PLEX which *do* have a specified value but those promotions were fairly limited in scope and in the case of fanfest tickets that's all internal to CCP.

Seriously you should really look into the laws here, as well as read a few more articles on these various cases, like I did when this whole thing started a few months ago. You'll find that legally it's highly unlikely gambling using in-game ISK breaks any laws and that there are very distinct differences between the CS:GO case and anything Eve related, namely the ability to convert CS:GO Skins to money and back again. You may not find this distinction important but it's key to the lawsuit against Valve and absolutely key legally speaking.

For example there's this case from Maryland where a secondary market was specifically called out as not causing the game to violate gambling laws: http://www.lawofthelevel.com/2015/11/articles/virtual-currency/court-rules-virtual-currency-casino-not-illegal-gambling-despite-secondary-market/

There's also a good PDF article here: https://www.pillsburylaw.com/siteFiles/Media/files/Make%20Sure%20Your%20Virtual%20Currency%20Doesn't%20Enter%20Illegal%20Gambling%20Territory(1).pdf

that includes the following line from the US federal legal code:

Quote:
“participation in any game or contest in which participants do not stake or risk anything of value other than (i) personal efforts of the participants in playing the game or contest or obtaining access to the Internet; or (ii) points or credits that the sponsor of the game or contest provides to participants free of charge and that can be used or redeemed only for participation in games or contests offered by the sponsor.”


In short: Do your homework on this before jumping to conclusions.
Dirty Forum Alt
Forum Alts Anonymous
#45 - 2016-09-19 21:03:19 UTC  |  Edited by: Dirty Forum Alt
You raise some interesting points - but I'm not sure you've thought them all the way through.

#1:
Cade Windstalker wrote:
Seriously you should really look into the laws here, as well as read a few more articles on these various cases, like I did when this whole thing started a few months ago. You'll find that legally it's highly unlikely gambling using in-game ISK breaks any laws and that there are very distinct differences between the CS:GO case and anything Eve related, namely the ability to convert CS:GO Skins to money and back again. You may not find this distinction important but it's key to the lawsuit against Valve and absolutely key legally speaking.

It is my understanding (confirmed by Lucas and not disputed by anybody) - that steam items are *not* convertible back to actual RL money. They are converted to "steam wallet" money - which is *only* useable within the steam stores. This is highly comparable to PLEX - and while the court has not (to my knowledge) reached a verdict about it (and may never do so as many out-of-court actions have occurred to avoid it)...if the court *did* decide that the CS:GO sites are actual illegal gambling sites it would be an extremely dangerous precedent for anybody running an EVE gambling site.


#2:
Cade Windstalker wrote:
For example there's this case from Maryland where a secondary market was specifically called out as not causing the game to violate gambling laws: http://www.lawofthelevel.com/2015/11/articles/virtual-currency/court-rules-virtual-currency-casino-not-illegal-gambling-despite-secondary-market/

Ironically this is one of the worst possible examples you could pick - as almost every detail that caused them to throw the case out does not apply to EVE gambling sites. They are *not* a mini-game within EVE itself, they are isolated *non-gameplay-related* games on non-CCP-owned sites. They also use tokens (isk) that clearly have value outside of their own game - as they are only valuable in EVE. And as stated in point #1 - they can be converted back to RL value for all CCP store purposes - just like the steam items. They also don't need to be weirdly classified as "slot machines" - as they've been operating long enough and doing enough business to simply be classed as "gambling venues" or "gambling organizations". Once again here - the CS:GO case is far more relevant to EVE gambling, and *could* set a very dangerous precedent.


#3:
Cade Windstalker wrote:
There's also a good PDF article here: https://www.pillsburylaw.com/siteFiles/Media/files/Make%20Sure%20Your%20Virtual%20Currency%20Doesn't%20Enter%20Illegal%20Gambling%20Territory(1).pdf

that includes the following line from the US federal legal code:

Quote:
“participation in any game or contest in which participants do not stake or risk anything of value other than (i) personal efforts of the participants in playing the game or contest or obtaining access to the Internet; or (ii) points or credits that the sponsor of the game or contest provides to participants free of charge and that can be used or redeemed only for participation in games or contests offered by the sponsor.”

Again the tokens are *not* provided by the people running the sites, and have value *outside* of the gambling websites. They are not provided "free of charge" and *can* be redeemed elsewhere. They can even be used to purchase tickets with fairly high RL $$$ values - provided by *CCP* - not provided by the gambling sites. Once again there is a very strong parallel to the CS:GO case - and any/all legal precedents set in that case will be very relevant.


And finally:
Cade Windstalker wrote:

In short: Do your homework on this before jumping to conclusions.

In this case I suggest you take your own advice - and actually make sure your examples are in any way relevant or fitting before jumping to your own conclusions.

The dead swans lay in the stagnant pool. They lay. They rotted. They turned Around occasionally. Bits of flesh dropped off them from Time to time. And sank into the pool's mire. They also smelt a great deal.

Paula Nancy Millstone Jennings (Sussex)

Dirty Forum Alt
Forum Alts Anonymous
#46 - 2016-09-19 21:09:45 UTC  |  Edited by: Dirty Forum Alt
Incidentally if anyone ever proved that any EVE gambling site also rigged their code such that they could/did use it for RMT (I know I know, tinfoil hat territory here) - then there would be a direct RL-cash-for-token option *provided by the people running the gambling site* - and you would in fact have the most clear-cut illegal gambling operation imaginable, without a legal leg to stand on.

Just a fun thought Bear

edit:
(not to mention the obvious tax evasion on an undeclared income source, and probably a few other fun legal violations)

The dead swans lay in the stagnant pool. They lay. They rotted. They turned Around occasionally. Bits of flesh dropped off them from Time to time. And sank into the pool's mire. They also smelt a great deal.

Paula Nancy Millstone Jennings (Sussex)

Cade Windstalker
#47 - 2016-09-20 13:42:57 UTC
Dirty Forum Alt wrote:
It is my understanding (confirmed by Lucas and not disputed by anybody) - that steam items are *not* convertible back to actual RL money. They are converted to "steam wallet" money - which is *only* useable within the steam stores. This is highly comparable to PLEX - and while the court has not (to my knowledge) reached a verdict about it (and may never do so as many out-of-court actions have occurred to avoid it)...if the court *did* decide that the CS:GO sites are actual illegal gambling sites it would be an extremely dangerous precedent for anybody running an EVE gambling site.


While this is true those funds can still be used in place of real money to buy anything listed on the Steam marketplace and those funds are displayed in real-world currency amounts. While it's possible that the court in these cases will rule that this is enough of a separation of "value" to make what went on not gambling I somewhat doubt it.

Since the Steam Wallet funds can be turned into something with a tangible real-world value that is easily and directly represented in real-world currency this probably satisfies that value argument in a way that PLEX does not, since PLEX (outside of the graphics card case, which has not repeated, possibly for exactly this legal reason) has no value outside the game it's a fairly good buffer between in-game currency and accusations that it has real-world value.

Dirty Forum Alt wrote:
Ironically this is one of the worst possible examples you could pick - as almost every detail that caused them to throw the case out does not apply to EVE gambling sites. They are *not* a mini-game within EVE itself, they are isolated *non-gameplay-related* games on non-CCP-owned sites. They also use tokens (isk) that clearly have value outside of their own game - as they are only valuable in EVE. And as stated in point #1 - they can be converted back to RL value for all CCP store purposes - just like the steam items. They also don't need to be weirdly classified as "slot machines" - as they've been operating long enough and doing enough business to simply be classed as "gambling venues" or "gambling organizations". Once again here - the CS:GO case is far more relevant to EVE gambling, and *could* set a very dangerous precedent.


These third-party sites are still games within the game, they're just created by players. They just use third-party tools to run the game. All of the transfer of items still happens within the game and its value system, not a real-world value system.

To extrapolate a bit and go back to the previous example. I don't have to declare ISK earnings in Eve on my taxes no matter what country I'm in. If I tried to do it my local tax authorities would tell me no and make me re-file my taxes. However, if I were to win a Steam contest that pays out a sufficiently large number of games I *would* have to declare that on my taxes because those games have real-world value and would clearly constitute a gift for tax purposes (provided the amount was high enough, ect)

Dirty Forum Alt wrote:
Again the tokens are *not* provided by the people running the sites, and have value *outside* of the gambling websites. They are not provided "free of charge" and *can* be redeemed elsewhere. They can even be used to purchase tickets with fairly high RL $$$ values - provided by *CCP* - not provided by the gambling sites. Once again there is a very strong parallel to the CS:GO case - and any/all legal precedents set in that case will be very relevant.


They don't have value in the legal sense though. Both you and the OP seem to be getting hung up on the idea that "value" in this instance just means "something that is valued by someone" which is not the legal definition. Someone could certainly argue to the court that the fact that I can buy PLEX gives the ISK a real-world value, but the counter argument is that it can't be turned into real currency again and can't be used to acquire things with real world value the way a currency can (and the way Steam Wallet funds can) and so far that argument has held up legally.

Every example you've given here for a counter argument is predicated on the idea that "value" doesn't mean what it does in fact mean legally speaking, which is something that is worth real-world money, and the fact that the $$$ -> PLEX -> ISK chain can't be reversed back to $$$ is enough to break that. It's also possible that the same argument may undo these CS:GO cases, but it's much more ambiguous in those cases (for the reasons I listed above).

So yeah, all this gambling paranoia is just that, and good for nothing more than cheap forum entertainment.
Dirty Forum Alt
Forum Alts Anonymous
#48 - 2016-09-20 13:52:11 UTC
I believe CCP would tell you that the gambling websites are *not* part of their game. In fact they were banned from the in game browser for a while - and now there isn't even an in-game browser for them to run on. They are very clearly *separate* games. With no skill based component.

Additionally, CCP lets people use PLEX to pay for fanfest tickets/etc every single year. Plus tours/etc. That can be around $500-1000 per person in RL money value paid for with PLEX. And again, let me emphasize - CCP is *not* the one providing the gambling service.

*You* seem to be missing the point that *I* am not saying CCP is legally liable in any way. I'm saying the people who own and operate the gambling websites should watch their step. *I* think that although they had some questionable practices in the past CCP's current operating policy places enough distance between them and the gambling sites to let them deny any relation at all - which leaves the gambling sites themselves squarely in the legal cross-hairs.


As for "not being displayed as RL money" - you are aware that CCP is (or at least was) based in Iceland right? Where the RL currency is, in fact, Isk? Honestly it is irrelevant as in both cases it is just virtual money that happens to have the same formatting/name as real money - but you didn't even get that point correct.



Now, I'm not saying it is clear-cut illegal. I'm just saying that *if* the CS:GO case sets the precedant that virtual items/money can be used as "valuable" currency in "illegal gambling" - *then* the EVE gambling sites would do well to take notice, because they are on much the same dangerous bridge between legal games and illegal gambling sites.

The dead swans lay in the stagnant pool. They lay. They rotted. They turned Around occasionally. Bits of flesh dropped off them from Time to time. And sank into the pool's mire. They also smelt a great deal.

Paula Nancy Millstone Jennings (Sussex)

Dirty Forum Alt
Forum Alts Anonymous
#49 - 2016-09-20 13:53:43 UTC
Plus of course the obvious PLEX can be used for 30 days game time, which has a RL $$$ value. and PLEX can be used to get AUR for the vanity store - which again has defined RL $$$ values.

If CCP were running the gambling sites this would be irrelevant, as it would be in game. But once again - they *are not run by nor affiliated with CCP*.

The dead swans lay in the stagnant pool. They lay. They rotted. They turned Around occasionally. Bits of flesh dropped off them from Time to time. And sank into the pool's mire. They also smelt a great deal.

Paula Nancy Millstone Jennings (Sussex)

Lucas Kell
Solitude Trading
S.N.O.T.
#50 - 2016-09-20 14:22:46 UTC
Cade Windstalker wrote:
This is incorrect, it's not that the thing is purchased with money it's that it's freely convertible back into money.
Irrelevant. As I've stated multiple times, try running an unregulated gambling site where people win non-transferable non-refundable airline tickets, see how well you do. There's absolutely no way they'd consider them to not be of value, even though they cannot be converted back into cash.

Cade Windstalker wrote:
These regulations are not, in fact, designed to prevent people from blowing all of their money gambling, they're designed to regulate gambling and confine it to certain laws and regulations.
You think the regulations are designed to keep people within the regulations? Got a bit of a loop going on there.

Cade Windstalker wrote:
Yes, because those tickets have value in the legal definition of the term. If you made a site that charged for tokens but you couldn't convert them to anything then you wouldn't be operating a gambling establishment under the sort of legal definition being used here.
But they can't be turned into money, which is why you're saying ISK has no value. And sure, if IWI were giving away IWITokens which then stayed as IWItokens forever, they'd just be a pretend gambling site. They don't though, they give away ISK which has value. You can buy event tickets with it in place of money for christ's sake.

Cade Windstalker wrote:
Thankfully this kind of pedantry with words doesn't really hold up in court. In short legally speaking ISK is not worth money any more than my Eve subscription is worth money. In the case of the subscription I'm paying for a non-transferable service. In the case of the ISK CCP expressly prohibits it from being exchanged for real world money. Legally speaking that is the definition of "value" because if I can't exchange something for money that thing is worthless to me.
That's no different from steam cash. You're not buying a game you're buying a license to download and play the game. ISK can be used to pay for things you would otherwise pay from with money. Good luck convincing a court that something you can use in place of money has no value.

Cade Windstalker wrote:
Also you're conflating a few facts here. You could not, at any point, buy Fanfest tickets (or a graphics card) with ISK. You could buy them by trading in in-game PLEX which *do* have a specified value but those promotions were fairly limited in scope and in the case of fanfest tickets that's all internal to CCP.
And PLEX can be bought with ISK. What you're saying is because the cash is laundered through multiple conversion steps it has no value. That's not how the law works. You can't just say "well i used my tokens to buy another type of token and used that to buy stuff, therefore the original token didn't get me stuff".

The Indecisive Noob - EVE fan blog.

Wholesale Trading - The new bulk trading mailing list.

Pandora Carrollon
Provi Rapid Response
#51 - 2016-09-20 17:28:41 UTC
Not sure where Lucas got his law degree but it didn't seem to come from the US.

CCP has attorneys and they are clearly okay with this. I'm not sure what ICELANDIC law is but stuff like this CAN (not necessarily *IS*) be locally regulated. You have to abide by the laws of the location you are in, both as a person and a corporation.

Since real money to ISK is a one way street. CCP is probably pretty safe. Their penalty for trying to go the other way is the maximum they can legally levy: removal from access to the game.

They regularly demonstrate due diligence on RMT so legally they are probably pretty safe everywhere in the world.

The Gambling Sites that use ISK are also probably okay depending on where they operate out of. Currency exchange is only viewed as such with controlled international currencies. EVE *ISK* hasn't shown up yet on a currency trade board yet so I don't think any competent attorney would have difficulty arguing it's lack of trade value in real life. It's not a physical 'good'. You can't pick it up or print it out and trade for it. Thus it's not property.

If I were to accept Mr. Kell's interpretation, then I could claim in international court that when I was openly attacked in vitual space and lost ships and goods that had 'real life value' that a crime in real life had happened to me and that I was deprived of property. In fact, you could also argue that EVE, the game, is gambling. I spend money for my subscription and for PLEX and I lose it in game all the time in games of skill and contest. Thus, there is no end to the legal junk that could be argued. This is where attorney's make their money.

Now, if Mr. Kell's proposition was actually correct, then the Mittani, a lawyer himself, would've been able to successfully go after IWI in real life, which hasn't seemed to work out that way. So, I think I'll side with CCP and the others here on the idea that gambling in EVE is probably safe for now, but who knows, some lawyer some place may actually successfully argue Lucas's idea to reality in a courtroom someplace. Wizards first rule and all.
Dirty Forum Alt
Forum Alts Anonymous
#52 - 2016-09-20 17:50:40 UTC  |  Edited by: Dirty Forum Alt
Once again you talk as if this is a part of EVE....or as if it is CCP supported...

CCP's legal strategy seems to be to make sure none of the gambling happens inside the game, and pretend they don't know it exists. This gives them plausible deniability if the case ever goes to court - meaning *CCP* is probably off the legal hook - their lawyers think so anyway.

However it also means that at the first sign of legal action CCP can act shocked, issue a "cease and desist" notice to the sites in question, and hang them out to dry. They will be on their own - with absolutely no way to claim it is in any way "part of the game" of EVE...


edit: News Flash: EVE existed before EVE gambling sites - and EVE will continue on just fine if the gambling sites get shut down and their owners are put in prison, or even executed (probably some dictator out there crazy enough to do it over tax evasion?) P

The dead swans lay in the stagnant pool. They lay. They rotted. They turned Around occasionally. Bits of flesh dropped off them from Time to time. And sank into the pool's mire. They also smelt a great deal.

Paula Nancy Millstone Jennings (Sussex)

Lucas Kell
Solitude Trading
S.N.O.T.
#53 - 2016-09-20 21:22:56 UTC  |  Edited by: Lucas Kell
Pandora Carrollon wrote:
Not sure where Lucas got his law degree but it didn't seem to come from the US.
Being British that is unlikely.

Pandora Carrollon wrote:
Since real money to ISK is a one way street.
No it's not. Plus you can buy real world services with it. You can pay to go on a tour run by a third party tour operator with it at fanfest. While their EULA it may protect CCP from direct action related to the conversion and gambling of funds, it certainly won't mean the sites themselves can go unregulated, and since CCP provide the backend that allows those sites to operate, they'd potentially be liable there. The only way they'd remove that liability is to ban sites from using the API if they host unregulated gambling.

Pandora Carrollon wrote:
EVE *ISK* hasn't shown up yet on a currency trade board yet so I don't think any competent attorney would have difficulty arguing it's lack of trade value in real life. It's not a physical 'good'. You can't pick it up or print it out and trade for it. Thus it's not property.

If I were to accept Mr. Kell's interpretation, then I could claim in international court that when I was openly attacked in vitual space and lost ships and goods that had 'real life value' that a crime in real life had happened to me and that I was deprived of property. In fact, you could also argue that EVE, the game, is gambling. I spend money for my subscription and for PLEX and I lose it in game all the time in games of skill and contest. Thus, there is no end to the legal junk that could be argued. This is where attorney's make their money.
No you couldn't because that's simply part of the game service being provided to you. The third party site is taking something of value from that game and allowing you to gamble with it.

You condescend, but if your interpretation here were accepted this thread wouldn't exist as the guys being charged would only have been gambling with in-game items. Getting coins in Fifa and consuming coins in Fifa is all part of the game, but that's what they were gambling with and that's what they are being charged for. Fifa coins by the way are also unable to be sold under their EULA, so they meet the criteria you've set for dismissing ISK. If anything Fifa coins have less reason to be considered to have a real world value since they can't pay for the type of services PLEX can.

Pandora Carrollon wrote:
Now, if Mr. Kell's proposition was actually correct, then the Mittani, a lawyer himself, would've been able to successfully go after IWI in real life, which hasn't seemed to work out that way.
Not really it's a new area of law and I doubt one lawyer with bias will get anywhere with it. As time moves on though, these sites will potentially find themselves in trouble.

The Indecisive Noob - EVE fan blog.

Wholesale Trading - The new bulk trading mailing list.

Dirty Forum Alt
Forum Alts Anonymous
#54 - 2016-09-20 21:34:31 UTC
By the way...

The official international exchange rate is 1 US Dollar -> 115.07 ISK

And YES - Fear Not! It works the other way too: 1 ISK -> 0.00869036 US Dollars.

So for every 1 million isk you have, you could trade it at *any official money exchange location* for $86,903.60 US Dollars.
(minus applicable exchange fees of course)



Now before you rush to cash in your EVE bank account - I should let you know the bad news: They only take Physical, RL money - they won't accept an electronic representation of the ISK. But if you could withdraw your isk in physical form! You could be rich!!!

The dead swans lay in the stagnant pool. They lay. They rotted. They turned Around occasionally. Bits of flesh dropped off them from Time to time. And sank into the pool's mire. They also smelt a great deal.

Paula Nancy Millstone Jennings (Sussex)

Cade Windstalker
#55 - 2016-09-20 21:40:45 UTC
First off, I am in fact well aware that Iceland has the Icelandic Króna as its official currency, however ISK is only its currency code, the symbol for the currency is 'kr'. Also it's explicitly stated in the in-game lore that ISK in Eve stands for "InterStellar Kredits" and it uses a different currency symbol, where as Steam's wallet uses whatever your native currency is explicitly stated to be dollars/pounds/euros/ect.

As for the idea that the CS:GO case is going to set a precident directly applicable here, I've already stated above several reasons why that's questionable. Most notably because the CS:GO related lawsuits rely on the idea that the Skins functioned as poker chips which had value. That literally only works because of the Steam marketplace and the dollar values it assigns to these items.

Also the whole "PLEX can be used to buy Fanfest tickets" thing doesn't really work, legally speaking, because it's taking money CCP has already been given and using it to pay for something they're offering. I vaguely recall someone from CCP saying that's why the graphics card promotion hasn't recurred, because of the potential legal implications, though don't quote me on that I don't have a source for it. Regardless though, that's still a really questionable way to link in-game money to Value since the whole system is internal to CCP and things that they offer. You could argue the same thing about Steam but Steam sells other people's goods and acts as a marketplace, while Fanfest is something CCP entirely runs and profits from the same as PLEX sales.

Also the AUR link is ridiculous, because that's just more virtual goods with no out of game value. Again, if I gank someone's Freighter full of Monocles I don't have to put it on my real-life taxes.

Lucas Kell wrote:
Irrelevant. As I've stated multiple times, try running an unregulated gambling site where people win non-transferable non-refundable airline tickets, see how well you do. There's absolutely no way they'd consider them to not be of value, even though they cannot be converted back into cash.


Yes but those airline tickets also represent a real-world service with a defined monetary value, while in-game ISK does not. When you buy game-time from CCP you're paying for access to that virtual world, and legally speaking things within that virtual world have no real-world value unless they're transferable back into cash.

See: previous examples about how I don't have to declare gank proceeds on my taxes.

Lucas Kell wrote:
You think the regulations are designed to keep people within the regulations? Got a bit of a loop going on there.


That's literally all they do. They exist to define and regulate gambling, not to stop someone from self-destructing. This affects things like how it's taxed, and stops people from setting up certain types of predatory gambling operations, but the laws certainly don't exist to stop people from betting their life savings.

Lucas Kell wrote:
But they can't be turned into money, which is why you're saying ISK has no value. And sure, if IWI were giving away IWITokens which then stayed as IWItokens forever, they'd just be a pretend gambling site. They don't though, they give away ISK which has value. You can buy event tickets with it in place of money for christ's sake.


See above, you're essentially just allocating money someone else has given to CCP. You can't sell those event tickets and the whole thing remains internal to CCP.

Similarly IGP the guys who run Mechwarrior Online can give away certain virtual items much more freely than others because the ones they sell in their shop directly fall under some Canadian laws regarding prize value, while in-game mechs (despite the fact that you can buy Credits which are used to buy the mechs) do not legally have that same value attribution.

Lucas Kell wrote:
That's no different from steam cash. You're not buying a game you're buying a license to download and play the game. ISK can be used to pay for things you would otherwise pay from with money. Good luck convincing a court that something you can use in place of money has no value.


Except it can't, I can't go down to Starbucks and pay for coffee with my in-game currency. That CCP lets me "buy" fanfest tickets with PLEX is entirely at their discretion and doesn't give in-game ISK a real-world value.

[quote=Lucas KellAnd PLEX can be bought with ISK. What you're saying is because the cash is laundered through multiple conversion steps it has no value. That's not how the law works. You can't just say "well i used my tokens to buy another type of token and used that to buy stuff, therefore the original token didn't get me stuff".[/quote]

That is *exactly* how the law works, because I can't back out of those conversion steps. The only reason gambling with poker chips counts as gambling, regardless of what I paid for those chips, is because I can then convert them back into real money. If you take out that step (as some charity events occasionally do) then it's no longer gambling because nothing of value is being won.

Seriously this is getting repetitive, you just keep repeating the same claim with no evidence to back it up, that because you can buy PLEX (an in-game item) and sell it, that the thing you sell it for has value, even though you can't then turn that thing into money. That is not how the legal definition of value works!
Dirty Forum Alt
Forum Alts Anonymous
#56 - 2016-09-20 21:51:29 UTC
You haven't addressed my point that CCP isn't the one running the gambling sites.

Lets take I Want Isk as an example, since they are probably the biggest:

You *purchase* I Want Isk tokens (which they call isk) with EVE isk. You then gamble for more I Want Isk tokens. Then you *convert* your I Want Isk tokens *back* into EVE isk.

EVE isk has RL $$$ value at EVE events. As well as (another issue you never addressed) at least 1 *non-CCP* tour company in iceland. Possibly a few other local businesses as well? Within EVE gameplay, accumulating this isk is legal, even though it has clearly defined dollar values and can be used for numerous services provided by CCP - because you accumulate it through *skill* inside the game (re-read your own first example you linked, of the woman who tried to claim some game was a slot machine).

However, by operating 100% separately from EVE with *their own* token system (regardless of the fact that they call it isk and give a 1:1 conversion ratio - it is *not* EVE isk) - I Want Isk in fact isolates their "slot machine" style game-play - and removes all skill from the acquisition of isk. Thus making it, legally, a slot machine (per your own example).

The dead swans lay in the stagnant pool. They lay. They rotted. They turned Around occasionally. Bits of flesh dropped off them from Time to time. And sank into the pool's mire. They also smelt a great deal.

Paula Nancy Millstone Jennings (Sussex)

Dirty Forum Alt
Forum Alts Anonymous
#57 - 2016-09-20 22:01:56 UTC
A similar example would be:
If I started up a blackjack table across from an arcade - but instead of betting money I bet only tokens for the arcade across the way - would this be gambling?

Clearly within the arcade itself, they can let you win free plays of their own games - and this is not gambling.

But by taking it *outside* of their arcade, and letting you gamble for tokens to *someone else's arcade* - I am in fact providing a clear-cut gambling service for something that has value *somewhere other than my own game*. Even though you can't buy a new car with the tokens - I would still argue that this is, in fact, gambling - and the local police would arrest me for doing something like this.

The dead swans lay in the stagnant pool. They lay. They rotted. They turned Around occasionally. Bits of flesh dropped off them from Time to time. And sank into the pool's mire. They also smelt a great deal.

Paula Nancy Millstone Jennings (Sussex)

Pandora Carrollon
Provi Rapid Response
#58 - 2016-09-21 00:12:03 UTC
Lucas-

Your bending and twisting is actually making my eyes hurt.

Let's just make it simple, if you're correct, then the Mittani will succeed in his lawsuits here in the US. If you aren't, then just accept it and move on.

Unless you're a solicitor there in the UK, I seriously doubt you'd get any of that to fly, but hey, I'm not British and I accept that anything in a human cultural pursuit is possible given enough time and push behind it.

BTW, online gambling with REAL US MONEY is legal here in the US... for the time being, there are a lot of challenges State by State with some outlawing it. So trying to fly the EVE ISK is real gambling flag just doesn't work, at least not here in the US.

I'll condescend to the fact that I am not pushing an agenda here. I don't actually CARE about EVE ISK gambling. If you aren't a UK solicitor, then you might want to check the mirror before calling some else names.
Dirty Forum Alt
Forum Alts Anonymous
#59 - 2016-09-21 00:17:39 UTC
Pandora Carrollon wrote:
Lucas-

Your bending and twisting is actually making my eyes hurt.

Let's just make it simple, if you're correct, then the Mittani will succeed in his lawsuits here in the US. If you aren't, then just accept it and move on.

Unless you're a solicitor there in the UK, I seriously doubt you'd get any of that to fly, but hey, I'm not British and I accept that anything in a human cultural pursuit is possible given enough time and push behind it.

BTW, online gambling with REAL US MONEY is legal here in the US... for the time being, there are a lot of challenges State by State with some outlawing it. So trying to fly the EVE ISK is real gambling flag just doesn't work, at least not here in the US.

I'll condescend to the fact that I am not pushing an agenda here. I don't actually CARE about EVE ISK gambling. If you aren't a UK solicitor, then you might want to check the mirror before calling some else names.

#1 - why are you only talking to Lucas?

#2 - Do you have any indication that the Mittani is pressing or has any intention to press lawsuits against I Want Isk? Or is that just a conspiracy theory/strawman argument you've come up with so you don't have to actually address anything that has been said?

The dead swans lay in the stagnant pool. They lay. They rotted. They turned Around occasionally. Bits of flesh dropped off them from Time to time. And sank into the pool's mire. They also smelt a great deal.

Paula Nancy Millstone Jennings (Sussex)

Dirty Forum Alt
Forum Alts Anonymous
#60 - 2016-09-21 00:28:32 UTC
I mean I can think of any number of reason the Mittani would choose *not* to pursue such a case:

-Most likely, it isn't his specialty as a lawyer (yes, they specialize in certain areas of the law quite often)
-It would make him the biggest laughingstock on the internet, as everyone would assume he was only going after them due to his video game losses
-It would expose him to potential scrutiny for being involved in shady dealings himself
-I'm not even sure he is a big enough lawyer to pick his own cases at all...
-etc.


Plus, who ever said he was even a *good* lawyer? Let alone the epitome of the craft and one to set precedent for the legal systems of entire nations?!?

Let us not forget that *this* is the man who got drunk and *publicly* tried to get people to harass someone into committing suicide - which would have made him guilty of some flavour of *murder* had the miner involved not actually been quite mentally stable and willing to take it as a big joke. (You scoff - but there have been incidents of people encouraging such things over social media that have been prosecuted - and they didn't even try to recruit thousands of helpers...)

I wouldn't hire him to provide me with critical legal advice.

The dead swans lay in the stagnant pool. They lay. They rotted. They turned Around occasionally. Bits of flesh dropped off them from Time to time. And sank into the pool's mire. They also smelt a great deal.

Paula Nancy Millstone Jennings (Sussex)