From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gambling is the wagering
of money or something
of material value
on an event with an uncertain outcome with the primary intent of winning additional
money and/or material goods. Typically, the outcome of the wager is evident within
a short period.
The term gaming
in this context typically refers to instances in which the activity has been specifically
permitted by law. The
two words are not mutually exclusive; i.e., a “gaming” company offers (legal)
“gambling” activities to the public.[2]
This distinction is not universally observed in the English-speaking world, however.
For instance, in the UK, the regulator of gambling activities is called the Gambling
Commission (not the Gaming Commission).[3]
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Legal
aspects
Both the Catholic and Jewish traditions traditionally set
aside days for gambling,[4]
although religious
authorities generally disapprove of gambling to some extent. Gambling can have
adverse social
consequences. For these social and religious reasons, most legal jurisdictions
limit gambling. Some Islamic nations prohibit gambling; most other countries regulate
it.[5]
Many
jurisdictions, local as well as national, either ban or heavily control (by licensing)
gambling. Such regulation generally leads to gambling tourism and illegal gambling.
In other terms gambling can be performed through materials which are given a value
but isn’t real money. The involvement of governments, through regulation and taxation,
has led to a close connection between many governments and gaming organizations,
where legal gambling provides significant government revenue, such as in Monaco
or Macau.
Under
US
federal law, gambling
is legal in the United
States, and states are free to regulate or prohibit the practice. Gambling
has been legal in Nevada
since 1931, forming the backbone of the state's economy, and the city of Las
Vegas is perhaps the best known gambling destination in the world. In 1976,
gambling was legalized in Atlantic
City, New
Jersey, and in 1990, it was legalized in Tunica,
Mississippi; both of those cities have developed extensive casino and resort
areas since then. Since a favorable U.S.
Supreme Court decision in 1987, many Native
American tribes have built their own casinos
on tribal lands as a way to provide revenue for the tribe. Because the tribes
are considered sovereign nations, they are often exempt from state laws restricting
gambling, and are instead regulated
under federal law. Additionally, almost all states have legalized gambling in
the form of a state-run lottery.
Because
contracts of insurance
have many features in common with wagers, insurance contracts are often distinguished
under law as agreements in which either party has an interest in the "bet-upon"
outcome beyond the specific financial terms. E.g.: a “bet” with
an insurer on whether one's house will burn down is not gambling, but rather insurance
— as the homeowner has an obvious interest in the continued existence of his/her
home independent of the purely financial aspects of the "bet" (i.e.,
the insurance policy). Nonetheless, both insurance and gambling contracts are
typically considered aleatory
contracts under most legal systems, though they are subject to different types
of regulation.
There is generally legislation requiring that the odds in
gaming devices are statistically
random, to prevent manufacturers from making some high-payoff results impossible.
Since these high-payoffs have very low probability,
a house bias can quite easily be missed unless checking the odds carefully.[6]
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Gambling
variables
There are three variables common to all forms of gambling:
- How much is being wagered, the initial stake (in money or material goods).
- The
predictability of the event.
- In mechanical or electronic gambling such
as lotteries, slot machines and bingo, the results are random and unpredictable;
no amount of skill or knowledge (assuming machinery is functioning as intended)
can give an advantage in predictability to anyone.
- However, for sports
events such as horse racing and soccer matches there is some predictability to
the outcome; thus a person with greater knowledge and/or skill will have an advantage
over others.
- The odds agreed between the two (or more) parties
to the wager; where there is a house or a bookmaker, the odds are (quite legally)
arranged in favor of the house.
The expected
value, positive or negative, is a mathematical calculation using these three
variables. The amount wagered determines the scale of an individual wager (bet);
the odds and the amount wagered determine the payout if successful; the predictability
determines the frequency of success. Finally the frequency of success times the
payout minus the amount wagered equals the "expected value" The skill of
a gambler lies in understanding and maneuvering the three variables so that the
"actual value" is positive over a series of wagers.
Types
of gambling
Casino
games
While almost any game can be played for money, and any game
typically played for money can also be played just for fun, some games are generally
offered in a casino setting.
Table
games
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Electronic
gaming
Other
gambling
Non-casino
gambling games
Gambling games that take place outside of casinos include
Bingo (as played in the US
and UK),
dead pool,
lotteries,
pull-tab
games and scratchcards,
and Mahjong.
Other
non-casino gambling games include:
- Card
games, such as Liar's
poker, Bridge,
Basset, Lansquenet,
Piquet, Put,
Teen patti
- Carnival
Games such as The
Razzle or Hanky Pank
- Coin-tossing
games such as Head
and Tail, Two-up*
- Confidence
tricks such as Three-card
Monte or the Shell
game
- Dice-based
games, such as Backgammon,
Liar's
dice, Passe-dix,
Hazard,
Threes, Pig,
or Mexico
*Although
coin tossing isn't usually played in a casino, it has been known to be an official
gambling game in some Australian casinos[7]
Fixed-odds
gambling
Fixed-odds
gambling and Parimutuel
betting frequently occur at many types of sporting events, and political elections.
In addition many bookmakers
offer fixed odds on a number of non-sports related outcomes, for example the direction
and extent of movement of various financial
indices, the winner of television
competitions such as Big
Brother, and election
results.[8]
Interactive prediction
markets also offer trading on these outcomes, with "shares" of results trading
on an open market.
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Parimutuel
betting
One of the most widespread forms of gambling involves betting
on horse
or greyhound
racing. Wagering may take place through parimutuel
pools, or bookmakers
may take bets personally. Parimutuel wagers pay off at prices determined by support
in the wagering pools, while bookmakers pay off either at the odds offered at
the time of accepting the bet; or at the median odds offered by track bookmakers
at the time the race started.
Sports
betting
Main article:
sports
bettingBetting on team sports has become an important service
industry in many countries. For example, millions of Britons
play the football
pools every week. In addition to organized sports betting, both legal and
illegal, there are many side-betting games played by casual groups of spectators,
such as NCAA
Basketball Tournament Bracket Pools, Super
Bowl Squares, Fantasy
Sports Leagues with monetary entry fees and winnings, and in-person spectator
games like Moundball.
Arbitrage
betting
Arbitrage betting is a theoretically risk-free betting system
in which every outcome of an event is bet upon so that a known profit will be
made by the bettor upon completion of the event, regardless of the outcome. Arbitrage
betting is a combination of the ancient art of arbitrage
trading and gambling, which has been made possible by the large numbers of bookmakers
in the marketplace, creating occasional opportunities for arbitrage.
Other
types of betting
One can also bet with another person that a statement
is true or false, or that a specified event will happen (a "back bet") or will
not happen (a "lay bet") within a specified time. This occurs in particular when
two people have opposing but strongly-held views on truth or events. Not only
do the parties hope to gain from the bet, they place the bet also to demonstrate
their certainty about the issue. Some means of determining the issue at stake
must exist. Sometimes the amount bet remains nominal, demonstrating the outcome
as one of principle rather than of financial importance.
Betting
exchanges allow consumers to both back and lay at odds of their choice. Similar
in some ways to a stock exchange, a better may want to back a horse (hoping it
will win) or lay a horse (hoping it will lose, effectively acting as bookmaker)
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Staking
systems
Many betting systems have been created in an attempt to "beat
the bookie" but most still accept that no system can make an unprofitable bet
profitable over time. Widely-used systems include:
- Card
counting - Many systems exist for Blackjack
to keep track of the ratio of ten values to all others; when this ratio is high
the player has an advantage and should increase the amount of their bets. Keeping
track of cards dealt confers an advantage in other games as well.
- Due-column
betting – A variation on fixed profits betting in which the bettor sets a target
profit and then calculates a bet size that will make this profit, adding any losses
to the target.
- Fixed profits – the stakes vary based on the odds to ensure
the same profit from each winning selection.
- Fixed stakes – a traditional
system of staking the same amount on each selection.
- Kelly
– the optimum level to bet to maximize your future median bank level.
- Martingale
– A system based on staking enough each time to recover losses from previous bet(s)
until one wins.
- Pot
odds vs. true odds - In poker,
the ratio of the size of the current pot to the bet a player is considering is
called "pot odds", which can be compared to the "true odds" of a player completing
a winning hand from the cards remaining to be dealt to determine whether to make
the bet.
Other
uses of the term "gambling"
Many risk-return choices are sometimes
referred to colloquially as "gambling." Whether this terminology is acceptable
is a matter of debate, but generally the following activities are not considered
gambling:
- Emotional or physical risk-taking, where the risk-return
ratio is not quantifiable (e.g., skydiving,
campaigning
for political office, asking someone for a date, etc.)
- Insurance
is a method of shifting risk from one party to another. Insurers use actuarial
methods to calculate appropriate premiums, which could be considered similar to
calculating gambling odds. However, insurers can set their premiums to obtain
a long term positive expected return.
- Situations where the possible return
is a secondary reason for the wager/purchase (e.g. buying a raffle ticket to support
a charitable
cause)
Investments
are also usually not considered gambling, although some investments can involve
significant risk. Examples of investments include stocks,
bonds
and real
estate. Starting a business can also be considered a form of investment. Investments
are generally not considered gambling when they meet the following criteria:
- Economic utility
- Positive expected returns (at least in the long term)
- Underlying
value independent of the risk being undertaken
Some speculative
investment activities are particularly risky, but are still usually considered
separately from gambling:
- Foreign currency exchange (forex)
transactions
- Prediction
markets
- Securities derivatives,
such as options
or futures,
where the value of the derivative is dependent on the value of the underlying
asset at a specific point in time (typically the derivative's associated expiration
date)
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Psychological
aspects
Studies show that though many people participate in gambling
as a form of recreation
or even as a means to gain an income, gambling, like any behavior which involves
variation in brain
chemistry, can become a psychologically
addictive and harmful behavior in some people. Reinforcement
schedules may also make gamblers persist in gambling even after repeated losses.
The
Russian writer Dostoevsky
(himself a problem gambler) portrays in his novella The
Gambler the psychological implications of gambling and how gambling can
affect gamblers. He also associates gambling and the idea of "getting
rich quick", suggesting that Russians may have a particular affinity for gambling.
Dostoevsky shows the effect of betting money for the chance of gaining more in
19th-century Europe. The association between Russians and gambling has fed legends
of the origins of Russian
roulette.
See
also
References
External
links