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Paddy Power and Betfair to pay £2m settlement after failing to protect users

about 20 hours ago
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Paddy Power and Betfair have reached a £2m settlement with the gambling industry regulator over social responsibility failings, including allowing one customer to bet for nearly eight hours solid.The Gambling Commission said the online betting and gaming brands, which are owned by Flutter Entertainment, had fallen “far short” of what was expected during a routine compliance assessment performed in 2024.Systems that were supposed to detect early indicators that gamblers may be experiencing harm and trigger checks on their wellbeing were found to have been insufficiently sensitive, resulting in late intervention.Failings identified by the Gambling Commission included one customer being allowed to stake £86,000 over a 16-day period, during which time they lost £6,000.“Despite the high velocity of spend, no manual review of the account took place,” the regulator said.

In another case, a gambler displayed “concerning behaviour in terms of intense spikes of activity” in their betting over a 17-day period without any intervention to check on their spending.During that period, their longest session lasted seven hours and 46 minutes, during which they placed 300 bets amounting to £20,000, more than £2,500 an hour.The account was only reviewed after the gambler hit a threshold triggered automatically by a certain degree of losses.The £2m settlement agreed between Flutter and the Gambling Commission is equivalent to slightly less than two hours worth of takings for the company, which is listed in London and New York and reported revenue of £10.5bn last year.

It is the company’s second fine in three years,It paid £490,000 in 2023 after accidentally sending promotional push notification to customers who had signed up to exclude themselves from gambling, inviting them to bet on a football match,John Pierce, the Gambling Commission’s director of enforcement, said the fine reflected “the seriousness of the failings identified and the importance of meeting social responsibility and customer interaction standards”,“Our compliance assessment in 2024 uncovered examples where interactions fell far short of what is required,These failings should never have occurred,” he added.

“While the licensees cooperated fully with the investigation, accepted the failings early, and implemented an action plan quickly, this immediate response is the minimum we expect from operators when serious shortcomings are identified.”A spokesperson for Flutter said the company took its safer gambling responsibilities seriously and firmly believed it led the industry in player protection.“Customer safety is our number one priority and there is no suggestion that any of the customers reviewed by the Gambling Commission experienced any harm,” they said.“Our controls have evolved significantly and we recently introduced a next-generation customer safety platform, with the vast majority of checks now happening in real-time.“As such, we are confident that the issues highlighted by the commission in its public statement would not be repeated today.

We continue to invest in our technology and our people to raise standards in the regulated industry.”
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Curse of Spoty? Rory McIlroy and golf could miss out again to Kelly or Norris

It has been a 2025 for the ages for Rory McIlroy. He cemented his legacy by completing a career grand slam with victory at the Masters. Then he carried Europe on his back at the Ryder Cup, defying the venom and spite of a braying Maga crowd. Now, though, he has one final devilish sandtrap to navigate: the curse of golf at the BBC’s Sports Personality of the Year award.Only twice in the 71-year history of the event has a golfer claimed the honour: the Welshman Dai Rees in 1957, when he captained Great Britain and Ireland to Ryder Cup success, and the Englishman Nick Faldo, following his Masters success in 1989

about 15 hours ago
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The Knicks have a trophy and Wembanyama has a chip on his shoulder: Five NBA Cup takeaways

New York got a championship while a high-stakes meeting between the Thunder and Spurs showed where the NBA, and the NBA Cup, is todayAfter toppling the defending champion Boston Celtics in a shocking upset in the Eastern Conference semi-finals this spring, The New York Knicks immediately became the favorites to represent the conference in the NBA Finals. The Indiana Pacers, a team that will no doubt go down as having one of the most compelling Cinderella stories in modern NBA history, had other plans.But this year, the East is more open than ever (though Knicks guard Jalen Brunson insists he’s “not a fan” of the narrative of a wide open conference). The Detroit Pistons have made a remarkable turnaround from being at the bottom of the East standings a few years ago to the top of them, but the Knicks’ showing in Cup play, ultimately hoisting the trophy in the third year of the contest, has shown what many believed heading into this season: they’re the team to beat.Brunson continues to be every bit the superstar his franchise needs, Mikal Bridges is having a fantastic season, and (knocks on wood) they’re as healthy as they’ve been in ages

about 17 hours ago
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Khawaja and Carey rise up to fill the gaps as England squander Australia’s gifts | Geoff Lemon

Chalk it up to fates or fortune or a quirk of probability, whatever your inclination. If Australia’s first day of the Adelaide Test was a jigsaw puzzle hurled into the air, most of the pieces landed face up in the right place. It has been a pattern for Australia in this Ashes series: monstered by England’s bowlers in Perth, only to create an even greater collapse; sliding in Brisbane, rescued by the lower order.England, meanwhile, brought a gameplan built on the surety that they couldn’t win in Australia with medium-fast seamers and a keeper up to the stumps, then lost to medium-fast seamers with a keeper up to the stumps. They were given the gift of no Pat Cummins, no Josh Hazlewood, no Nathan Lyon (in Brisbane) and still managed to lose twice in six days

about 21 hours ago
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Jofra Archer steps up to show his true value lies beyond pundits’ stereotypes | Barney Ronay

This was a gripping day of Test cricket. The visuals were perfect. Adelaide Oval was a dreamy place, with its bleached greens, soft surfaces, the scroll of blue above the stands, the sense of some chino-shorted Eden, ultimate expression of the leisured triumphalism of the southern summer.In the middle of this there were long periods where three games seemed to be happening all at once. England versus Australia

about 21 hours ago
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The Spin | Bradman’s greatest hour: how Australia came from 2-0 down to win the Ashes

By the time you read this, day one of the third Test will have gently unfolded/catastrophically unspooled. You will already have some inkling of how (un)likely it is that England will be able to haul in Australia’s 2-0 lead and claw back the urn.As you also probably know, only one side has overcome a 2-0 deficit to win a series, and that side was Australia, and that Australia included Don Bradman.The year was 1936. England boarded the Orion at Southampton docks in gabardines and trilbies to sail away on their first Ashes tour since Bodyline

about 22 hours ago
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‘Very TikTok-able’: sumo wrestling’s unlikely British boom

It is a centuries-old Japanese tradition, steeped in ceremony, with roots deep in the ancient faith of Shintoism … and it also happens to be super popular on TikTok.Sumo is finding a new audience in the UK and, not only that, many Britons are now donning a loincloth – or mawashi – and taking up the sport themselves. So much so, in fact, that amateur wrestlers from across the UK and Ireland are gearing up for the first ever British Isles Sumo Championships, due to be held in six weeks.It comes after sumo’s elite professionals captured hearts in October when they visited from Japan for a grand tournament at the Royal Albert Hall in London. They were pictured wholesomely visiting Horse Guards Parade, enjoying Platform 9 ¾ at King’s Cross station and riding Lime bikes around London

about 23 hours ago
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Reeves defends Grangemouth intervention; Warner Bros urges investors to reject $108bn Paramount bid – as it happened

about 17 hours ago
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The stats don’t lie. Australia’s tax system is designed to benefit the wealthiest and the rest of us pay for it | Greg Jericho

about 18 hours ago
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Amazon in talks to invest $10bn in developer of ChatGPT

about 20 hours ago
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UK insists US tech deal not dead as Trump threatens penalties against European firms

1 day ago
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If he never returns, Terence Crawford’s legacy as one of boxing’s greats is secure | Bryan Armen Graham

about 13 hours ago
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Miami Dolphins to bench QB Tua Tagovailoa after missing playoffs

about 15 hours ago