In The News: International Gaming Institute

Sports Betting Community

Martin Lycka is joined by Executive Director of 51³Ô¹ÏºÚÁÏ International Gaming Institute, Brett Abarbanel, in the latest episode of the Safe Bet Show. Brett discusses gambling in the esports space compared to gambling on non-digital sports, and much more in today's episode of Martin Lycka’s Safe Bet Show.

SBC Americas

After a four-year break, 51³Ô¹ÏºÚÁÏ’s 18th International Conference on Gambling and Risk Taking returns May 23-25 at Park MGM in Las Vegas. The conference features three days of presentations, panels, and keynotes as well as more informal discussions around gambling. The event, which usually runs every three years will be meeting for the first time since the pandemic.

CDC Gaming Reports

Axes.ai Wednesday announced a 10-year lease agreement for its headquarters and artificial intelligence development center. The Las Vegas-based fintech developer will locate its new facilities at the Black Fire Innovation Campus at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas’ Harry Reid Research and Technology Park.

CDC Gaming Reports

Sightline Payments recently released data to the University of Nevada Las Vegas International Gaming Institute (51³Ô¹ÏºÚÁÏ IGI) that identifies various clusters of payments behavior. The data will help understand how payments behavior can support responsible gambling efforts.

Ggrasia

New research by the University of Nevada, Las Vegas International Gaming Institute (IGI) suggests that identifying patterns of behavior when people pay for gaming services can eventually support responsible gambling efforts, as it might help detect at-risk players. The study was conducted based on data provided by various payment technology and software providers.

Gambling News

A recent study used data by global transaction processor Sightline Payments to examine the spending habits of gambling addicts

Payment Expert

Tapping into data from Sightline Payments, the University of Nevada Las Vegas has revealed that roughly 12% of US gaming consumers demonstrate payment habits that expose them to experiencing gambling harm.

Gaming America

The research examined payment habits and their link to responsible gambling.

PlayUSA

A new study from the 51³Ô¹ÏºÚÁÏ International Gaming Institute analyzed customer payment data to help identify potential problem gambling behavior.

GGRAsia

New research by the University of Nevada, Las Vegas International Gaming Institute (IGI) suggests that identifying patterns of behaviour when people pay for gaming services can eventually support responsible gambling efforts, as it might help detect at-risk players. The study was conducted based on data provided by various payment technology and software providers.

Sports Handle

Both bookmakers and bettors can benefit from A.I. like ChatGPT

SBC Americas

The potential rise in problem gambling in the United States is undeniably a popular subject of discussion—and rightfully so. Today, legal mobile gaming products are available to consumers in 24 states, reaching almost 60% of the US population. This Problem Gambling Awareness Month, we’d like to highlight a new stream of gamblers’ behavioral data that could help inform operators, regulators, and advocates about ways that payment transactions can be used to help identify potential gambling-related harms.