Newbodog.com Problems Illustrate Possible Future Legal Issues with Online Poker Rooms
News
coverage of the recent Newbodog.com online poker room and casino domain name
difficulties has been published all over the Internet, as the rules and
regulations that govern the web and the general law of the Internet comes under
speculation and users begin to wonder exactly what playing poker amid the
climate of changing international and local online poker room laws mean for
them. With the rapid implementation of
different gambling laws that pertain to online poker rooms and casinos, players
and establishment both have little clue what might happen in the future that
might have some inadvertent effect on the online
poker room and casino business.
Considering the tremendous amount of money that gets funneled through online poker rooms and casinos, it is perfectly
natural that they are a target for attack from all manner of headhunters hiding
behind lawyers that might be looking for any type of financial remuneration
that they can possibly get their hands on.
The idea of lawsuits and frivolous legal actions in the United States
is not new, as the legal system is choked to the point of gridlock with cutting
edge activities and lawsuits that are basically meaningless but sometimes have
a chance of paying off.
But
the issue with Newbodog.com
revolves around legal problems that have nothing to do with recent rulings by
the United States
government, but relate to patents that were filed in 1995 regarding the way
that online
poker rooms and casinos conduct business over the Internet. It is unclear what actions will be taken in
the future to alleviate potential difficulties with the patent law for online poker
rooms and casinos that will allow them to continue operating, but it would
appear that after the lawsuit was filed, Newbodog.com never responded and the
verdict was rendered in absentia, without the proprietor of Newbodog.com
consent. It is speculated that, if Newbodog.com
had formulated a defense and retained attorneys to combat the legal patent
ruling, that the entire patent fiasco would be a non-issue, relegated to a
simple motion and filing, rather than a multimillion dollar lawsuit.
Unfortunately,
until the patent law is fully defined and cleared up, it is very likely that
online poker rooms and casinos that conform to the type of business model and
information sharing protocols that were first set down in the 1995 patents will
be skating on thin ice.