Facebook Youtube
Ceviche News Logo
  • ES
  • PT
  • EN
  • ES
  • PT
  • EN

Learn

GiG

Wise

Wise

Optimove

Facebook Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
  • EXPERTS
  • LEARNING
    • 1on1 INTERVIEWS
    • WEBINARS
  • G&M EVENTS
    • G&M Events 2022
    • G&M Events 2023
    • G&M Events 2024
    • G&M Events 2025
    • G&M Events 2026
    • G&M Events 2027
  • iGAMING
  • B2C
  • MARKETS
    • LATAM AND CARIBBEAN
    • USA AND CANADA
    • EUROPE
  • EVENTS
  • MY CASINO
    • LAND BASED
    • ONLINE
  • G&M LEARN

Learn

GiG

  • G&M EVENTS
    • G&M Events 2022
    • G&M Events 2023
    • G&M Events 2024
    • G&M Events 2025
    • G&M Events 2026
      • G&M Events Paraguay 2026
      • G&M Events Colombia 2026
      • G&M Events Peru 2026
      • G&M Events Brazil 2026
      • G&M Events Argentina 2026
      • G&M Events Mexico 2026
      • G&M Events Ecuador 2026
    • G&M Events 2027
      • G&M Events Paraguay 2027
  • EXPERTS
  • LEARNING
  • iGAMING
  • LAND-BASED GAMING
  • SUBSCRIBE
  • G&M EVENTS
    • G&M Events 2022
    • G&M Events 2023
    • G&M Events 2024
    • G&M Events 2025
    • G&M Events 2026
      • G&M Events Paraguay 2026
      • G&M Events Colombia 2026
      • G&M Events Peru 2026
      • G&M Events Brazil 2026
      • G&M Events Argentina 2026
      • G&M Events Mexico 2026
      • G&M Events Ecuador 2026
    • G&M Events 2027
      • G&M Events Paraguay 2027
  • EXPERTS
  • LEARNING
  • iGAMING
  • LAND-BASED GAMING
  • SUBSCRIBE

Banner Altenar


LEARNING

Kary Carbone (FSRG Initiative). Connecting finance, health, and technology to detect and prevent gambling-related harm in a digital world

Recently, the Kindbridge Research Institute’s Financial Stability and Responsible Gambling Initiative launched, in partnership with UCLA, the report ‘Gambling-Related Financial Harm: A Public Health Approach to Financial Stability in a Digital Era.’ We talked to the FSRG Initiative Project Lead to discuss the conclusions of that document. She states that, as digital payments, fintech and gambling converge, early detection of financial harm becomes a shared responsibility across industries.
March 26, 2026
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn
She demands more cross-sector dialogue, stronger consumer education around spending and financial risk, and better shared understanding of which signals may matter most before harm escalates.

By Tatiana Martins, journalist at G&M News.

The FSRG report suggests that gambling is becoming increasingly embedded in everyday digital financial life. What are the most important changes in the way people interact with gambling today compared to a decade ago?

The biggest change is that gambling has shifted from being a more discrete, cash-based activity into something that is woven into daily digital life. A decade ago, for many people, gambling was more bound by place, time, and payment friction. Today, it is accessible through phones, integrated into digital routines and supported by instant funding tools that make participation feel fast, normal, and continuous. The range of products has also expanded well beyond traditional casino play or sports betting to include activities like Esports and prediction markets, which can blur the line between gambling, entertainment, and financial activity. When you combine that with constant digital visibility and marketing, gambling starts to feel less like a distinct event and more like just another form of everyday spending or participation.

One of the key findings is that early signs of gambling-related financial harm often go undetected. Why do you think these signals are currently so difficult for financial, healthcare, and payment systems to identify?

One reason these signals are so hard to identify is that no single system has a complete picture. Financial institutions may see transaction activity, but they may not interpret it through a gambling-harm lens. Healthcare providers may see anxiety, depression, sleep disruption, or financial stress, but routine screening for gambling remains inconsistent. Payment systems facilitate the movement of money, but they are not typically structured for early harm detection either. That creates a fragmented environment where warning signs are visible in pieces but rarely connected. By the time those dots get connected, the person may already be presenting in crisis, whether through clinical care, legal problems, or serious financial fallout. The Financial Stability and Responsible Gambling Initiative is focused on helping connect these fragmented signals so earlier, more coordinated intervention becomes possible.

The report emphasizes the role of instant payments and frictionless digital tools in shaping gambling behavior. How do these technologies change the perception of spending and risk for consumers?

Frictionless payment tools can change gambling from something that feels like a deliberate financial decision into something that feels almost ambient. When people can fund accounts instantly through digital wallets, linked payment methods, or one-click transactions, there is less pause between impulse and action. That matters because friction is often what gives people a moment to register what they are spending. When that pause disappears, losses can feel less tangible in real time, and the true extent of spending may not become clear until much later. The issue is not just speed. It is that these tools can reduce the ‘pain of paying’ and create a sense of uninterrupted access to money, which can distort risk perception and make financial harm harder to recognize while it is happening.

The FSRG Initiative brings together stakeholders from multiple sectors. What kind of collaboration between finance, healthcare, regulators, and gambling operators do you believe are most urgently needed?

The most urgent need is better coordination around early indicators and practical prevention tools. Right now, different sectors each see a different part of the picture. For example, operators are often closest to gambling behavior in real time, financial institutions may observe spending patterns, healthcare providers may see downstream distress, and regulators help shape the broader environment in which all of this operates. There’s an opportunity to bring those perspectives into better alignment so early signals are easier to recognize and consumers encounter more consistent, practical, and non-stigmatizing support. In the near term, that means more cross-sector dialogue, stronger consumer education around spending and financial risk, and better shared understanding of which signals may matter most before harm escalates.

What practical steps could institutions and policymakers take now to improve early prevention and reduce gambling-related financial harm?

One is to more clearly frame gambling as a form of spending within the broader context of financial health, rather than focusing solely on outcomes like winning or losing. Another is to strengthen and adapt existing financial literacy, mental health, and responsible gambling resources so they better reflect how people engage today, including digital payments, instant funding, and emerging products that can blur the line between gambling and other forms of financial participation. There is also an opportunity to build on tools that already exist -such as budgeting, expense tracking, and financial education- by more directly incorporating gambling-related spending and financial stress. More broadly, the goal is to support earlier awareness of risk and improve coordination across financial, healthcare, payments, and research environments so that financial stress can be identified and addressed before it escalates.

academic research awareness collaboration detection digital payments fintech FSRG Initiative gambling harm Government identification igaming institutions interview investigation Kary Carbone Kindbridge Research Institute land-based gaming North America operators player protection players prevention report responsible gambling risks sports betting stakeholders strategies study technology UCLA United States
Previous ArticleGR8 Tech was selected as ‘Best Sports Betting Provider in CEE 2026’
Next Article Georgi Izov (Amusnet). A decade of innovative products, dedication, partnerships, and a striving for growth

RECENT ARTICLES

Cubeia launches Legendz.io on its Nano Platform 

May 28, 2026

HELL Partners at IGB Live: Prada Gifts, Private Screenings, and Your Next Best Deal

May 28, 2026

European iGaming Enforcement in 2026: What the Penalty Data Actually Reveals About Operator Compliance

May 28, 2026

LuckyHills Wins “The Fairest General T&Cs” at Casino Guru Awards

May 27, 2026

Brazino777 launches new mobile app on Google Play in Mexico

May 27, 2026
Banner SIGA
DATA.BET
DST
Oddsgate
Banner DataFactory
Melbet
Mancala
Mancala gaming

ABOUT US

A gaming and betting news platform for gaming operators and providers in Latin America and around the world

For questions or sponsorships, do not hesitate to contact us
info@g-mnews.com
comercial@g-mnews.com

OUR SELECTION

Cubeia launches Legendz.io on its Nano Platform 

May 28, 2026

HELL Partners at IGB Live: Prada Gifts, Private Screenings, and Your Next Best Deal

May 28, 2026

European iGaming Enforcement in 2026: What the Penalty Data Actually Reveals About Operator Compliance

May 28, 2026
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
Facebook Youtube
Ceviche News Logo