The huge change coming to pokies rooms designed to help problem gamblers

How every pokies punter could soon be watched with facial recognition cameras monitoring everyone who enters a VIP room in a HUGE change designed to help problem gamblers

  • New technology rolled out across Australia will help those addicted to the pokies
  • System will identify those who signed up to be excluded from gambling venues
  • Cameras will scan faces of those in pokies rooms and alert staff if need be
  • Currently onus is on wait staff to recognise those wanting to stop gambling

Problem gamblers will soon find it extremely difficult to enter pokies rooms thanks to a new high-tech system being rolled out across Australia.

Pubs and clubs will have access to the new facial recognition technology, which uses cameras to scan the faces of those heading to the poker machines.

For those wanting to kick their gambling habits, they can sign up to a self-exclusion system.

The new technology is then able to compare the face of those heading to the pokies to those signed up to the exclusion system, with staff immediately alerted if there’s a match.

Currently those wanting to quit gambling can apply to be excluded from certain venues, but the pressure is on hospitality staff to recognise the punters.

Problem gamblers will soon find it extremely difficult to walk into pokies rooms thanks to a new high-tech system being rolled out across Australia 

The technology alerts staff when someone who has voluntarily asked to be excluded from a gambling venue because of their problem gambling tries to enter. Pictured, the fictitious example of self-excluded gambler trying to enter a venue

The technology alerts staff when someone who has voluntarily asked to be excluded from a gambling venue because of their problem gambling tries to enter. Pictured, the fictitious example of self-excluded gambler trying to enter a venue

Poll

Do you think the cameras are a good idea?

  • Yes – it’ll help gambling addicts 5 votes
  • No – it’s creepy and intrusive 10 votes

The software is a major upgrade to existing self-exclusion programs that are mostly paper-based and often failed because they relied on hotel staff checking paper documents.

While there’s little to help those addicted to slot machines, the self-exclusion system is a new glimmer of hope for many.

The main reasons problem gamblers sign up for self-exclusion is that they have lost too much money, cannot control their gambling or have developed financial and relationship problems because of their gambling. 

Facial recognition software sends an alert about anyone on the self-exclusion register who enters a venue to the venue staff via an app.

Camera in gaming venues scan the faces of anyone who enters the venue

Facial recognition software sends an alert about anyone on the self-exclusion register who enters a venue to the venue staff via an app

The cameras are already operating widely in South Australian pubs and in around 100 venues in New South Wales.

It is understood venues with the cameras agree to only use the data collected from the facial recognition program to compare with the self-exclusion system.

Jeff Bradford, managing director of a company that sells the camera systems, Element Security, told Daily Mail Australia the technology is working in hundreds of venues across Australia already.

In one case a woman who tried to enter a venue by using a friend’s ID card was caught out by the system and excluded, potentially saving her thousands of gambling losses.

‘Implementation into venues has already proven that this is a successful solution,’ Mr Bradford said.

A company that sells the camera systems, Element Security, told Daily Mail Australia the technology is working in hundreds of venues across Australia already

A company that sells the camera systems, Element Security, told Daily Mail Australia the technology is working in hundreds of venues across Australia already

Australians lost approximately $25billion to legal forms of gambling between 2018 and 2019, representing the largest per capita losses in the world, according to the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare.

In any one month Aussies spent $157million on the pokies, second only to betting on horse and dog racing.

According to a recent study from Gambling Research from last year, the number of Australians with a gambling problem has doubled over 10 years to more than 1 per cent.

There are more than 190,000 electronic gambling machines in Australia – more per capita than almost any other major jurisdiction, aside from Nevada, data from 2019 shows.

If you have a gambling problem and are interested in a self-exclusion program or other solutions, contact Gambler’s Help on 1800 858 858.

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Read more at DailyMail.co.uk