Key gambling reform campaigner calls for pause to controversial affordability checks

A picture


Dr James Noyes, one of the key early advocates of affordability checks for online gamblers, has joined calls for Lisa Nandy, the culture secretary, to instruct the Gambling Commission to pause the implementation of checks “until there has been adequate evaluation and scrutiny” of a pilot scheme to assess how checks might work in practice.Noyes’s intervention in the long-running debate over affordability checks comes in an open letter sent to Nandy on Monday.It echoes similar calls for a halt to the process by many senior figures in the racing industry, which fears a disproportionate effect on racing bettors with the potential to cost the industry tens of millions of pounds in income if punters refuse to supply financial information to gambling operators and switch to the black market instead.Noyes says in his letter that while affordability checks were “a worthy idea in principle” when first proposed in 2020, his call for checks was made on the basis “a gambling ombudsman would be created to ensure proper treatment of consumer redress and rights”, “checks would be non-intrusive” and “while preventing serious cases of harm from happening, they would not impede the majority of gamblers from engaging in a lawful activity which involves inherent risk, economic agency and their own money”.Noyes, a senior fellow of the Social Market Foundation (SMF) thinktank, argued for the introduction of affordability checks in their reports published in 2020 and 2021 and a number of his proposals were included in a government white paper on gambling reform, which was published in April 2023.

The Gambling Commission launched a pilot study on what it describes as “financial risk assessments” in September 2024 to assess a two-tier system of checks to highlight possible gambling-related harm and the extent to which checks would be “frictionless”, ie background checks that would not require customers to supply financial information to keep betting.The Commission has yet to publish a final report on the pilot and has not issued an update on its progress since the spring of 2025.A number of media reports in recent weeks have suggested its board could approve the introduction of checks at a meeting next month.In his letter, Noyes says he is “deeply concerned over a lack of transparency” regarding checks and is “reading increasing reports that the pilot scheme has involved inconsistent data, unclear outcomes and unnecessary friction”.He is also “particularly alarmed by reports that checks will prove unnecessarily burdensome to horse racing bettors, to the detriment of that sport”.

The government, Noyes says, has “a duty to listen to the [British Horseracing Authority’s] warnings and to act accordingly, in order to protect such an important part of British cultural and social life”.Noyes is one of Britain’s most prominent advocates for gambling reform and the forcefulness of his intervention is both unexpected and timely as Nandy weighs up whether to intervene and put a halt to any imminent implementation of checks.The final paragraph of his letter concludes that “the current situation of financial risk checks is raising serious questions, which should be addressed by government before any further progress of that policy is made.I am therefore calling on the government to pay heed to the BHA’s warnings and to pause these checks until there has been adequate evaluation and scrutiny.”Newmarket: 1.

15 Makerstoun 1,50 Adaay Of Scarlett 2,25 Talk Of New York 3,00 Startled (nb) 3,35 We Never Stop 4.

10 We’re Goosers 4.45 Mister Winston Market Rasen: 1.35 Giovanni Change 2.10 Diamonds Galore 2.45 Plains Drifter 3.

20 Lord Chamberlain 3.55 Grain Trade 4.30 Southoftheborder 5.05 Epinephrine 5.35 Crystal Glade Newton Abbot: 2.

33 Laffer Curve 3.08 Masonbrook Meadow 3.42 Irish Chorus 4.17 Dearkeithandkaty 4.52 Soldierofthestorm 5.

22 QuickkickLingfield: 4.25 Prizeland 5.00 Might Vega 5.30 Lara Antipova 6.00 Lordsbridge Way 6.

30 Mr Baloo 7,00 Grey Sands 7,30 Profit Street (nap)A spokesperson for the Gambling Commission said in a statement on Monday that the regulator is “continuing to work on financial risk assessments with one of the key focuses being on removing friction for consumers”,The statement added: “If introduced, consumers would not need to provide documents for the checks to be completed,As with any regulatory measure, we will be considering potential impacts for consumers and businesses before making a decision on financial risk assessments, including how they would work in practice if introduced.

trendingSee all
A picture

Goldman Sachs chief ‘hyper-aware’ of risks from Anthropic’s Mythos AI

Goldman Sachs’s chief executive, David Solomon, has said he is “hyper-aware” of the capabilities of Anthropic’s Mythos AI model and is working “closely” with the tech firm after it issued warnings about the cybersecurity risk it poses.The US bank had been monitoring the rapid advances in artificial intelligence, including large language models (LLMs), as part of wider efforts to protect itself from hackers.“Obviously the LLMs are making rapid progress and we’re hyper-aware of the enhanced capabilities of these new models with the help of the US government and the model publishers,” Solomon told analysts on an earnings call on Monday.That included Anthropic, the company behind the Claude family of AI tools. Last week it claimed that its latest model, Mythos, posed an unprecedented risk because of its ability to expose flaws in IT systems

A picture

Oil price tops $100 a barrel as US blockades strait of Hormuz; Goldman Sachs posts rise in profits – as it happened

Time to wrap up…Oil prices have jumped back above $100 a barrel and global stocks fell after weekend talks between the US and Iran ended without an agreement and Donald Trump imposed a blockade of the strait of Hormuz.The US president announced the blockade on Sunday, targeting Iranian vessels and ships that have paid a toll to Iran for passage through the strait, in an attempt to choke off the flow of Iranian oil.US Central Command said it would start blocking all Iranian Gulf ports and coastal areas from 3pm UK time, in effect seizing control of maritime traffic in the strait of Hormuz.Trump said on Monday afternoon that ships coming near the blockade would be “eliminated”, warning Iran not to send its “fast attack ships”:double quotation markWarning: If any of these ships come anywhere close to our BLOCKADE, they will be immediately ELIMINATED, using the same system of kill that we use against the drug dealers on boats at Sea. It is quick and brutal

A picture

Elon Musk’s X cuts payments to users who post clickbait

Elon Musk’s X has reduced payments to users who post clickbait and recycle news stories as it warned account holders against “flooding the timeline” with low-quality content.Nikita Bier, X’s head of product, wrote on the social media platform that all “aggregators” – users who quickly repackage and repost news from other accounts – had received less money from the creator revenue sharing programme.Under the scheme, X gives a share of advertising revenue to creators who have at least 500 verified followers and generate at least 5m views over a three-month period. Bier wrote that aggregators had their payouts reduced by 60% and that total will be reduced by a further 20%.“It became abundantly clear: flooding the timeline with 100 stolen reposts and clickbait everyday crowded out real creators and hurt new author growth,” he wrote

A picture

Booking.com warns customers of hack that exposed their data

The accommodation reservation website Booking.com has suffered a data breach with “unauthorised parties” gaining access to customers’ details.The platform said it “noticed some suspicious activity involving unauthorised third parties being able to access some of our guests’ booking information”.“Upon discovering the activity, we took action to contain the issue,” it said. “We have updated the pin number for these reservations and informed our guests

A picture

Rory McIlroy says preparation at ‘home course’ Augusta aided Masters defence

Rory McIlroy has explained how weeks of preparation at “home course” Augusta National after advice from Jack Nicklaus played a substantial role in his successful ­Masters defence.Rather than play in PGA Tour events in the lead up to the Masters and despite a back injury causing him competitive disruption, McIlroy spent considerable time at Augusta in the lead-up to the Masters. On one occasion, it is understood he played the front nine in 29 when playing with a single ball.After seeing off Scottie Scheffler by a stroke, the Northern Irishman and now six-time major winner pointed towards his deliberate buildup. “I joked last week that this place feels like my home course,” said McIlroy before leaving Augusta

A picture

County cricket: Anderson stars as Lancashire win thriller against Derbyshire – as it happened

Jimmy Anderson peeled back the years with every neat and tidy stride from the James Anderson End, poetically butterflying Derbyshire at Old Trafford.It was a day of high drama from start to finish, with Ben Aitchison grabbing two wickets in the first over of the day, much to the surprise of the Lancashire No 10, Mitchell Stanley, who was still doing himself up and dropping gloves on his way to the middle.Derbyshire were finally set 138 to win, which felt possible, though Caleb Jewell, who has a blind spot against Lancashire, was out in the second over. From then on, it was nip and tuck, until Anderson started his second spell. Just 4