Chinese use apps to punt on World Cup

Gambling is illegal in China but that hasn't stopped soccer fans punting billions on the tournament via smartphone apps.

China's internet giants and insurance companies are finding ever more innovative ways to get around the country's strict betting laws and reap a payout as fans wager billions on the World Cup.

Gambling is banned in China, except where it is run by the government or the proceeds donated to charity.

But technology behemoths Alibaba and Tencent have this year linked up with state-owned provincial lotteries to enable punters to bet on the World Cup online.

Both have smartphone gambling apps which have proved hugely popular during the Brazil tournament, and on which more than 10 billion yuan ($A1.73 billion) is expected to be bet legally - dwarfing the 2.3 billion yuan figure reached at the 2010 finals in South Africa.

Many times more will be spent illegally.

Neither Tencent nor Alibaba has a gambling licence. They earn revenue by acting as online platforms for provincial lotteries which offer odds betting on most aspects of the game.

Alibaba - which heavily promotes World Cup betting on its main e-commerce shopping platform, Taobao - takes a seven per cent cut of money gambled through its websites, the Beijing Youth Daily reported.


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