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Jun 17, 2008
Offline Promotion: Positive or Negative?
Not a day goes buy I don’t get a helpdesk question asking “I don’t have a website, can I still promote on the PAW Network?”
So how can i promote?
 
Jun 02, 2008
Have you had your Sex and the City?
Have you had your Sex and the City?You’ve probably been living under a shell and have somehow found a way to stash all your senses 50 metres deep, if you don’t know about the new Sex and the City craze. It’s been a while since I’ve known that many women to be unavailable at the same time!!
Sex and the City and Affiliate marketing
 
Nov 05, 2007
Getting Organized And Being On A Schedule
Getting Organized And Being On A Schedule

Getting organized and being on a schedule will help Poker Affiliates overall productivity.

Jeremy discusses the importance of this in his latest article.

Getting Organized And Being On A Schedule
 
Oct 02, 2007
Top 5 Linking Strategies for Poker Affiliates
Top 5 Linking Strategies for Poker Affiliates

This is a great member submitted article for poker affiliates about Linking Strategy.

The article outlines the top 5 linking strategies for affiliates to increase their poker SEO.

Top 5 Linking Strategies for Poker Affiliates
 
Oct 02, 2007
Jeremy's Best of September Blog Posts
Jeremy

Aside from writing content at PAW, Jeremy Enke also blogs about various poker affiliate issues in a personal blog.

These are a sampling of the best posts that are pertinent to the Poker Affiliate Industry for September.

Jeremy's Best of September Blog Posts
 
Sep 27, 2007
Web Design - Raw HTML versus CMS
Web Design - Raw HTML versus CMS

For many affiliates, it can be a difficult decision when deciding what platform to build their websites on.

The most common platforms in the poker affiliate world are either Frontpage or Content Management Systems.

Web Design - Raw HTML versus CMS
 
PokerAffiliateWorld.com - News

Apr 23, 2007
Keep Out Legal Gambling by I. Nelson Rose Keep Out Legal Gambling by I. Nelson Rose

Legal expert and online gamings most prominent attorney I. Nelson Rose shares his thoughts on countries trying to keep out legal online gaming.

The fundamental question is still yet to be answered, Can a state or nation keep out foreign legal gaming?

Gambling and the Law®:
Keeping Out Legal Gambling

The biggest news over the last few years for Internet gambling has been the attempt by many governments to keep out foreign legal operators.  Legal complaints have been filed in the World Trade Organization (“WTO”) and the European Court of Justice (“ECJ”) against countries like the U.S. and Italy, which have passed laws that have the real-world effect of making it a crime for a licensed online gaming site to take bets from those countries.

While the issue of whether to legalize is being debated, law enforcement officials face a more fundamental question:  Can a state or nation keep out foreign legal gaming?

We now may be able to answer that question, or at least make educated guesses, due to recent decisions from not only the ECJ and WTO, but also the United States Supreme Court.

The first step is to find a statute or regulation that might apply.  Most fights against remote betting stop here, because lawmakers simply have not enacted the necessary laws.

The anti-gambling laws that are on the books were designed for specific problems from other eras.  The Wire Act, for example, the major federal barrier to overseas-based gaming, was passed in 1961 as part of Attorney General Robert Kennedy’s “war on organized crime.”  It was designed to help states fight illegal bookmakers who took sports bets by telephone.  No one at the time thought about the possibility of playing poker on home computers.

The federal Department of Justice, which is charged with enforcing federal laws, asserts the Wire Act covers all forms of interstate and international gambling.  But the few courts that have looked at the issue have ruled the Wire Act is limited to bets on sports events and horse and dog races.  So, if these courts are correct, the question of whether the U.S. Congress had the power to bar foreign, licensed Internet poker under the Wire Act, need not be answered, because that statute simply does not apply.

Of course there are other federal and state statutes.  Though almost all of those have severe weaknesses, such as not clearly stating that they apply to activities taking place partially in other countries.

The recently enacted Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act does nothing to correct this problem.  An underhanded political move by the failed politician Bill Frist, ex-majority leader of the U.S. Senate, this Act applies only to Internet gambling that is unlawful under some other federal or state law.

Assuming there is a law in place that makes it illegal to accept bets on a particular form of gambling, there is no doubt that a state or nation can keep out illegal gambling.

The situation gets much more complicated if the operator is acting legally under its local laws.

Still, states start with the right to bar the importation of all goods and services, even if these come from places where it is legal to sell and ship these products.  The problem arises when a government has agreed, sometimes unintentionally, to eliminate its trade barriers.

Usually when a state joins a federation, like the states of the United States or Australia, or signs a treaty organization, like the European Union, it finds it has opened its borders to goods and services from its sister states or trade partners.  The United States discovered that it had consented to allow in legal gambling from other member states of the WTO when it signed the WTO treaties.  Its major mistake was failing to do what some other member states did: specifically list “gambling” as an activity it wanted kept out.

But decision-makers have unanimously agreed that gambling is different from other legal businesses.  A government can bar foreign gaming, if it can come up with good reasons for doing so.

This is easy if the state has a complete prohibition.  Utah does not have to allow in California State Lottery tickets if it does not permit anyone to sell lottery tickets to its residents.

States that want to exclude legal foreign gambling always raise the same arguments: fear of fraud, money laundering, organized crime, underage and problem gambling, and because it offends local morality.  Governments cannot rely solely on the real reason – to keep out competition.

It is almost impossible to successfully argue that a state has the right to exclude a legal activity from its sister states or trade partners when that state allows only local operators to do the exact same thing.

This is what happened to the U.S. in its fight with Antigua in the WTO.  The WTO ruled that the U.S. had agreed to let in legal gambling from other members of the WTO.  But it then bought the argument that federal laws against remote gambling were necessary to protect Americans.  So, the U.S. would have won .  But Antigua raised the Interstate Horseracing Act, which allows Americans to bet on races from their homes, but only with operators in U.S. states.  Since there is no reason for this discrimination against Antiguan horsebooks, the U.S. was held to be in violation of the WTO treaties.

The same type of analysis can be done with any two countries and any form of gambling, for anyone willing to spend large amounts of time and money.

© Copyright 2007.  Professor I Nelson Rose is recognized as one of the world’s leading experts on gambling law.  His latest books, Internet Gaming Law and Gaming Law: Cases and Materials, are available through his website,  www.GamblingAndTheLaw.com.

 
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DuplicatePoker.com offers PAW members a $125 CPA for all new members! A great new skills games.
DuplicatePoker.com Skill Games Affiliate Program
 
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Lucky Ace Poker and Casino have now been added to the PAW Integrated Network's impressive list. Earn $150 CPA for eligible players or up to 30% rev share
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FullTiltPoker.com Affiliate Program
 
PAW Casino Affiliate Programs

The PAW Network also represents many online casinos with CPA rates STARTING at $100 - $200
PAW Casino Affiliate Programs
 
RedKings Poker

RedKings is part of the Ongame Network and Poker offers PAW members a generous CPA of $150.
RedKings Poker Affiliate Programs
 
HollywoodPoker.com

Hollywood Poker Affiliate Program offers PAW members a lucrative $150 CPA for all new members.
Hollywood Poker Affiliate Program
 
AbsolutePoker.com

Absolute Poker is on the PAW Network and accepts U.S. players. PAW members can earn 26% MGR + a $25 CPA.
AbsolutePoker.com Affiliate Program
 
Hansa Poker

Hansa Poker offers PAW members up to a 40% MGR. Get in on this exciting new room!
HansaPoker.com Affiliate Program
 
CDPoker.com

CDPoker.com offers members of the PAW Network a choice of a $100 CPA, or a 32.5% rev share deal.
CDPoker.com Affiliate Program
 
PokerStars.com

PokerStars.com offers PAW members CPA's from $75 up to $150. Players are also eligible for monthly Freerolls.
PokerStars.com Affiliate Program
 

 
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