Jenny
Woo Interviews Poker
Source Online's Jay
Lakin
As a lot of you
know, sweet,
outgoing Jenny
usually does the
Entertainment side
of things. However,
I had the
opportunity to
interview Jay Lakin,
who gave Jenny a
crash course on
whatıs been going on
in the gaming
industry. I hope
this interview will
help many of you as
it has Jenny.
Jenny: You starting
www.PokerSourceOnline.com,
was that something
you had in the works
for a while or was
it something that
just fell in your
lap?
Jay: Actually,
PokerSourceOnline.com
was a spin off of an
Ebay auction that my
partner (his distant
cousin) and I did.
Basically what
happened was, he and
I were power sellers
on Ebay. We were
both into poker but
the weekly basement
tournament poker, so
we really werenıt
very much for online
poker. He was
looking around for
someone to sell on
Ebay, as he wanted
to do cause he like
to get into all
these different
kinds of things. He
saw somebody giving
away a poker book
with a Party Poker
sign up. And he
thought thatıs
weird, how can a guy
be giving away a
book just for
someone signing up
for Party Poker. He
did a little
research and he
found out that
PartyPoker had an
affiliate program
that paid you $50
for every depositing
player you brought
them.
He sat and did the
math and he said,
³well let me see,
the book with
shipping is probably
$25, the guy is
getting $50 from
Party, thatıs a 100%
profit. He decided
that he didnıt want
to copy somebody
elseıs auction, so
he decided to give
away a set of poker
chips. He put this
auction up and he
had this software
that re listed every
time something got
sold. So his first
day out he sold
thirty to forty chip
sets. He called me
up that night and
said, ³listen I need
have dinner with you
tomorrow night and I
need to talk to
you.² We got
together for dinner
and he told me what
he had done and he
said, ³I think I got
something here².
And I said, ³I think
you do too². We went
out and bought as
many poker chips as
we could and we
started doing this
thing on Ebay.
While all this was
going on, my partner
thought that we
should probably try
to get around the
Ebay thing, rather
than pay the listing
fees and commission
fees and create a
website to do this
on. And so thatıs
how
PokerSourceOnline.com
came to
be. Within a month,
Ebay had kicked us
off because they
didnıt want to have
anything to do with
online gambling. And
because we had
already started the
website and we
already had this
database of hundreds
of email addresses,
we just emailed all
these people and
said, ³we now have
this website and
please tell your
friends². Talk about
viral. Within a
couple of months
there were places
talking about us on
the internet and it
just took off.
Now we have just
launched our newest
site
www.pokerbonuses.com
a couple of
weeksago.
Jenny: And how is
that going?
Jay: Thatıs going
pretty well. The
difference between
the two is
PokerSourceOnline.com
is more for the
beginning player,
somebody whoıs
looking for
information about
online poker and the
different sites out
there. Basically,
someone who wants to
get a gift for
listing their money.
So for example,
someone comes to
PokerSourceOnline
and when they sign
up for
PokerStars or
FullTilt, we give
them a set of poker
chips or $50 Amazon
gift card. Thereıs
about a dozen gifts
they can choose
from.
PokerBonuses.com is
more for the
established player
and the
knowledgeable player
who is looking for
the best poker
bonuses on the
internet. Because of
our relationship
with all the
different rooms,
weıre able to
negotiate the best
bonuses from all the
sites. So the
players can come to
PokerBonuses.com and
they can sign up for
a poker room and get
a great sign up
bonus.
Jenny: You started a
promising career on
local and nationally
syndicated radio
shows that started
in 1980 and lasted
to 2004.
Jay: My last day on
the air was December
31st 2004.
Jenny: Have any of
your experiences or
connections from
radio reflected onto
your world of online
gaming?
Jay: No. The only
thing that Iıll
credit my radio
career in doing is
giving me ability to
talk with people, to
communicate well and
to be knowledgeable
on a diverse area of
topics. So that when
Iım at an affiliate
convention, be it
Amsterdam or London
or Barcelona or
recently Moscow, I
can meet with people
from various
backgrounds, various
ages, various
interests, various
cultures, and I can
talk with them and
develop a very good
report very quickly.
Which is a very good
thing for
PokerSourceOnline
because I'm able to
get the best deals
from the rooms and
in turn offer the
best gifts to our
members.
Jenny: Give a brief
summary of The
Unlawful Internet
Gambling Enforcement
Act (UIGEA) for
those people that
are just tuning in
to whatıs going on
or want to find out
more with the legal
aspects of the
industry.
Jay: The UGIEA was
enacted back in
September of 2006
literally in the
last moments of
Congress. It was
attached to the Safe
Ports Bill, so most
people didnıt even
know they were
voting on it. It
basically prohibited
the transfer of
funds from banks,
credit card
companies to online
gaming
establishments, but
it carved out online
lotteries, sport
fantasy leagues,
and horse racing. So
basically what
Congress was saying
to the American
public was if you
want to put $1000 on
Seabiscuit in the
fifth at Aqueduct,
go right ahead. But
if want to play one
cent, two cent Texas
Holdıem on your
laptop, then we
donıt want that.
This obviously drove
a lot of the major
publicly traded
sites out of the
states almost
instantly.
PartyPoker left the
day that Bush signed
it into law and
overnight I think
lost 80% of their
traffic. The only
rooms that stayed
were the rooms that
were privately held
and didnıt have
stockholders or a
board of directors
to answer to. Which
is why PokerStars is
still in the U.S and
is now the largest
online poker room in
the world because
they still take U.S.
traffic.
And recently, just a
couple of weeks ago
the banks went in
front of Congress
and said, ³we canıt
enforce this law
that youıve burdened
us with. We have
mortgage
foreclosures and all
this stuff that is
going on. Youıre
making us the police
of the internet with
the online gambling
and we donıt have
the time the man
power, or the money
to do it and by the
way, how are we
suppose to tell the
difference between
somebody betting on
a horse and somebody
betting on a dog.²
Itıs like going into
a liquor store and
you can buy Gin but
you canıt buy Vodka.
My main thing about
the UGIEA just so
that everybody
understands, Iım not
pro gambling on the
internet or anti
gambling on the
internet. Iım for
letting people do
whatever they want
to do in the privacy
of their home and
whatever they want
to spend their money
on. The problem I
have with the UIGEA
is the hypocrisy of
it. Itıs staggering.
Donıt tell me that
this type of
gambling is good and
this kind of
gambling is bad.
Either ban all
gambling on the
internet or allow
all gambling on the
internet.
Jenny: The (UIGEA)
was a huge blow to
the online gambling
industry. How
damaging has the
reality been to not
just you but all
involved with this
industry?
Jay: Well I canıt
speak for the
industry as a whole
other then what I
had mentioned
earlier about
PartyPoker and a lot
of the other sites
losing a pretty big
chunk of their
traffic. But I can
tell you what it did
to PokerSourceOnline
and that is that it
gave us a kick in
the butt. We
realized that if we
were to survive,
which a lot
affiliate sites in
the U.S. have
not since the UIGEA
for one reason or
another, we have to
go after the rest of
the world. We were
about 95% U.S.
traffic when the
UIGEA took place and
we realized that
there are millions
of people in other
countries that also
play poker on the
computer and why
arenıt we plugging
those people, why
arenıt we marketing
to those people. We
do everything in
house, we do all of
our programming in
house, all of our
design, all of our
customer service.
So we hired about a
dozen or so people
that spoke German,
Portuguese, Russian,
Swedish, and
Spanish.
Jenny: Any Asian in
there?
Jay: Hahaha, no. We
didnıt do Japanese
or Chinese, because
the poker rooms
werenıt asking for
them. The poker room
didnıt come to us
and say, ³ We want
Chinese players and
want Japanese
players.² They said,
³ we want players
from Brazil, we want
players from Eastern
Europe, we want
players from the
Scandinavian
counties, etc.² So
we hired these
people and we
translate our site
now in seven
languages and we
started running
advertising in Bluff
Australia and Bluff
EU and PokerPro UK
and all the other
places. And
here we are a year
and a half after the
UIGEA and were
bigger and stronger
than we were before
the UIGEA. More than
half of our business
is now outside the
U.S. and Canada.
Jenny: Well that
leads to my next
question.
PokerSourceOnline.com
has been labeled as
the largest poker
affiliate in the
world. As the
percentage of U.S.
players had dropped,
what did you do to
keep your head above
water?
Jay: Yes it is.
Thatıs exactly what
we did. We decided
that we would just
take on the rest of
the world. We were
basically turning
lemons into
lemonade.
Jenny: Speaking of
lemons, How was the
UIGEA passed? What
went wrong and could
it have been
prevented?
Jay: Yes. The same
way that the horse
racing fat cats got
their little niche
carved out and the
online lotteries and
the sports fantasy
guys got their
little niche carved
out. The online
poker sites could of
done the same thing,
but they were too
busy looking out for
themselves. If they
had banded together
as they have now
back then and hired
the K Street
lobbyists and
learned the
politicianıs pockets
like all the other
guys did, the UIGEA
may not of happened
in the first place.
And if it did
happen, poker may
have gotten carved
out as well. The
good thing is that
the online poker
sites have learned
from that mistake
and they now do see
that thereıs
strength in numbers.
They support
organizations like
IMEGA and they
support the Poker
Playerıs Alliance
and people like that
that are trying to
overturn the UIGEA
and have declared
unconstitutional.
Jenny: What have you
kept and changed in
PokerSourceOnline.com
as a result of the
legislation?
Jay: I think the
only thing we have
changed is that we
now have a little
flag symbol on the
rooms that still
take U.S. players.
Hahaha. I think
thatıs the only
thing that weıve
changed, other then
as I mentioned the
translation part.
And we obviously
redesign the site
every couple of
months just to keep
it fresh and up to
date. Weıre not
doing anything
differently,
we still give out
the best prizes and
offer the best
service and 24/7
customer support. If
anything weıve just
gotten better.
Jenny: Give us a
summary on the three
major internet
gambling bills, H.R.
2046, H.R. 2610 and
H.R. 5767 that are
currently in
Congress.
Jay: Ok, 2046 is the
Barney Frank bill
and that basically
license online poker
rooms to internet
protection against
underage gambling,
compulsive gambling
and money
laundering. 2610 is
Bob Wexlerıs Bill,
which would carve
out games of skill,
which most people
consider poker to
be, all you have to
do is look at the
final table of just
about any WSOP event
and you see the same
faces time after
time after time.
5767 is the brand
new one. Barney
Frank and Ron Paul
have written and co
sponsored and that
basically prohibits
the treasury and the
Federal Reserve from
implementing and
enforcing the UIGEA.
In fact either today
(6-20-08) or Monday
(6-23-08) itıs going
to be sent for mark
up. Which basically
means their going to
set a date to
discuss it.
Jenny: The
Interactive Media
Entertainment and
Gaming Association (IMEGA)
is a non-profit
corporation founded
in 2007. What has
been their role in
the industry? And
give us an update on
what they are doing
today to help?
Jay: IMEGA
originally went in
front of Judge
Cooper out of New
Jersey to challenge
the
constitutionality of
the UIGEA.
Unfortunately, the
judge found against
them, but she also
said that they could
continue to pursue
it in higher courts.
Which is what IMEGA
has been doing. Itıs
a shame that IMEGA
wasnıt around pre
UIGEA because with
powerful K Street
lobbyists that are
part of it, they
probably could of,
if not stopped the
UIGEA, they could of
at least gotten
poker carved out of
it.
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