澳大利亚将加强对赌博广告的监管,此前已受到多年批评。
The Australian government has announced gambling advertising reforms

原始链接: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c62492e925lo

澳大利亚正在实施新的赌博广告限制,此前多年来一直因其人均赌博损失高居世界首位而受到批评。虽然没有全面禁止,但自1月1日起生效的改革将把电视广告限制在每小时3则(上午6点至晚上8点30分之间),并在现场体育直播期间禁止广告。 广播广告将在学生上下学时间受到限制,名人/运动员将被禁止出现在赌博宣传中。在线广告需要成年人登录账户并提供退出选项。广告也被禁止在体育场馆和制服上。政府还将打击非法离岸赌博网站和某些在线游戏类型。 这些变化受到了赌博行业和倡导团体的批评。赌博行业担心收入损失和“危险先例”,而倡导团体则认为这些措施不够,需要全面禁止以保护儿童。尽管一些行业人士承认公众情绪正在变化,但他们担心限制可能会促使赌徒转向不受监管的离岸平台。

对不起。
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原文

Australia to crack down on gambling ads after years of criticism

Tiffanie TurnbullSydney
Getty Images Anthony AlbaneseGetty Images
Australia has the highest per capita gambling losses in the world

The Australian government has announced long-awaited gambling advertising reforms, after years of public pressure.

The suite of measures will further limit when and where gambling ads can appear, as well as who can star in them - but it stops short of a full ban, which had cross-party support and the backing of a range of community groups.

Restrictions have been fiercely opposed by powerful gambling agencies, as well as media firms and sports organisations who feared a steep revenue hit.

Australians lose more money to gambling, per capita, than anywhere else in the world.

A number of countries - like Italy, Belgium and Spain - have introduced total or near-total bans on gambling advertising, and a parliamentary inquiry weighing up reform in Australia recommended similar more than 1000 days ago.

In a speech to the National Press Club on Thursday, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said his government was "getting the balance right" with this package.

"Letting adults have a punt if they want to, but making sure our children don't see betting ads everywhere they look."

Under the reforms, from January 1:

  • TV ads from betting agencies will be capped at three per hour, between 6am and 8:30pm, and banned completely from any live sports broadcasts during those hours
  • Gambling ads will be banned from radio during school pick-up and drop-off times
  • Celebrities and sports players will not be permitted to appear in gambling advertising
  • Gambling ads on online platforms will be banned, unless people have a logged in account, are over 18 and have the option to opt-out
  • Gambling ads will be outlawed in sports venues and on players' and officials' uniforms

The government will also crack down on illegal, offshore gaming sites, and ban more types of online gambling - like Keno and apps and websites modelled on poker machines.

The measures have already prompted backlash from voices in the gambling industry.

In a statement, Responsible Wagering Australia - the peak body for betting agencies - said the new measures are "draconian" and set a "dangerous precedent".

"Today it's gambling advertising, tomorrow it's alcohol, then it's sugary drinks, fast food, critical minerals and who knows what else comes next," chief executive Kai Cantwell said.

He accused the government of blindsiding a sector that supports 30,000 jobs and "provides critical funding to sport, racing and broadcast industries".

A spokesperson from Sportsbet - one of Australia's biggest agencies - said they were concerned the "overly blunt" restrictions could have "unintended consequences", like driving more Australians towards illegal offshore betting which isn't limited by the same conditions.

"Sportsbet recognises changing community sentiment on gambling advertising and has already taken proactive steps."

Many of those advocating for change were also unhappy, believing the proposed changes don't go far enough.

"Imagine three cigarette ads per hour," Reverend Tim Costello said.

"Australian children deserve to grow up in a country that puts their wellbeing before corporate profits."

His Alliance for Gambling Reform were among groups calling for a full gambling advertising ban on the web and broadcast platforms, and the establishment of a national industry regulator.

Similarly, Australian Medical Association vice-president Julian Rait in a statement declared that "partial bans do not work".

"Anything less than a comprehensive ban will continue to expose Australians - especially children - to relentless gambling promotion," he said in a statement.


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