British Columbia online casino black online

British Columbia’s controversial online casino is back up and running. At 7:00 PM last night, the British Columbia Lottery Corporation’s PlayNow.com website was re-launched, giving players in the Canadian province the first opportunity in more than a month to play their favorite casino games online.

The online casino was the first launched in North America but it only lasted a couple hours before a security breach caused it to be shut down. A glitch in the software allowed some players to use the accounts of others, wagering with someone else’s money. For security reasons, the website was quickly shut down and only re-launched after an investigation concluded that it was safe.

Following the shutdown of the online casino, the Lottery Corporation went to work investigating the incident, along with an independent investigation from the Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner and another review by a private consulting firm, Deloitte. At the end of the investigation, those involved concluded that the problem was caused by a software glitch that would have been “almost impossible” for the BCLC to foresee.

Is that supposed to make me feel better? Right now I’m wondering if there are any other glitches that are almost impossible to see. I don’t know about you, but if I was a resident of British Columbia, I’m not sure I would feel comfortable gambling at their online casino. This debacle is yet another in a long list of examples of how government has never been able to run a business as well as a private enterprise. British Columbia residents should demand private casinos, separate from their bumbling government.

The British Columbia Lottery Corporation estimates that each day the website was shut down they lost $150,000 in revenue. In total, they estimate losing $5 million while the online casino was shut down. PlayNow.com is the first online casino to be launched in North America, though Quebec expects to launch one of their own this fall and Ontario plans to follow by the year 2012.

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