Does playing fantasy sports amount to gambling? Debate intensifies – Los Angeles Times

Anyone watching sports on television can see that the business of daily fantasy sports contests has exploded.

Fueled by incessant TV advertising, the daily fantasy sports market — led by the two privately held online giants of the sector, FanDuel Inc. and DraftKings Inc. — has swelled into a multibillion-dollar business in just a few years.

Now the U.S. government and some state authorities, responding in part to a recent scandal involving a DraftKings employee, are taking a closer look at the legality of daily fantasy sports. That’s raising the specter of more regulations and a slowdown in the games’ soaring popularity.

“Right now most legal observers have viewed fantasy sports as falling on the side of being a game of skill” and thus legal and largely unregulated, said Jodi Balsam, an associate professor of law at Brooklyn Law School and a former lawyer with the National Football League.