Channels
Log in register
piqd uses cookies and other analytical tools to offer this service and to enhance your user experience.

Your podcast discovery platform

Curious minds select the most fascinating podcasts from around the world. Discover hand-piqd audio recommendations on your favorite topics.

You are currently in channel:

Technology and society

Elvia Wilk
Writer, editor
View piqer profile
piqer: Elvia Wilk
Monday, 06 August 2018

Sports Betting As Data Market

Big betting on sports requires second-by-second information about what’s happening during a game, and TV and radio operate on a five-to-ten-second delay. That’s why sports data gatherers are embedding themselves in sports arenas, especially at major events like the World Cup. They’re transmitting play-by-play bytes to big players in the betting industry, or to be posted directly online to betting sites where watching bidders are waiting to make financial decisions.

The legality of this kind of data gleaning is under debate. Football leagues have their own approved data streams that become valueless when circumvented by such schemes. And self-gathered data is hard to insure, protect, or verify. Or, as the author of this article on the topic asks:

“Does real-time data from a sporting event, like the sounds of a musical performance, have a claim to royalties and copyright protection for those who produce it? By creating a sort of monopoly, could a mandate for official data actually do more harm than good?”

Sports Betting As Data Market
6.7
One vote
relevant?

Would you like to comment? Then register now for free!

Stay up to date – with a newsletter from your channel on Technology and society.