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  • Betfair Betting Exchange
    At Betfair there is NO BOOKIE. All bets on Betfair have been placed there by users who either want to have a bet in the normal way (back), or offer odds to other punters (lay). Bets are matched between people with opposing views. Differences between betting with Betfair vs. a bookmaker: You can back or lay a bet. You can choose the odds you want to play at Commission and Tax. You can bet whilst the game is in play.

Betfair - Who is behind Betfair?

 

Betfair is the trading name of The Sporting Exchange Ltd.

The Sporting Exchange Limited is registered as a limited liability company in England and Wales, company number 3770548. The registered office of The Sporting Exchange Limited is at:

The Waterfront,
Hammersmith Embankment,
London,
W6 9HP.

The Sporting Exchange Limited was founded in August 1999 by Andrew Black and Edward Wray in order to commercialise proprietary betting technology that had been under development for the preceding year.

The technology used by The Sporting Exchange Limited is proprietary and, as well as being protected by copyright, is the subject of several patent applications that have been filed with various jurisdictions.

The Sporting Exchange Limited is located in the United Kingdom and operates within the confines of the Betting, Gaming and Lotteries Act 1963. It holds a bookmaker's permit in England and Wales

The fact that gamblers can now lay outcomes on the exchanges has caused tremendous criticism from traditional bookmakers with much of the anger coming from the UK's "Big Three" - Coral, Ladbrokes and William Hill. These firms argue that granting who they consider to be anonymous punters the ability to bet that an outcome will not happen is causing corruption in sports such as horse racing (since it is much easier to ensure a horse will lose a race, the bookmakers reason). Exchanges such as Betfair counter that while corruption is possible on any gambling platform, the bookies' arguments are motivated not by concern for the integrity of sport but by commercial interests. Exchanges also assert that they are well aware of who their customers are and Betfair in particular has noted that they have signed numerous agreements with governing bodies of sport including the Jockey Club, with whom they insist they will co-operate with fully if the latter suspects corruption to have taken place

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