
The Province of Buenos Aires has initiated its most significant offensive to date against the unregulated online gambling sector, moving to block 300 illegal betting websites.
The Provincial Institute of Lottery and Casinos (IPLyC) of Buenos Aires, under the leadership of President Gonzalo Atanasof, has officially filed criminal complaints targeting the operators of 300 illegal betting websites. These legal actions were submitted to specialized prosecutorial units within the judicial departments of San Isidro, La Matanza, and Lomas de Zamora.
This investigation goes far beyond simply identifying unauthorized platforms; authorities are aiming to dismantle the complex criminal networks behind them. The IPLyC suspects that these websites are merely the public face of coordinated criminal organizations engaged in money laundering and systemic tax evasion.
Through extensive cyber-monitoring, analysts discovered that these operators utilize sophisticated evasion techniques, including frequently shifting domain names and hosting servers in offshore tax havens like Malta and Curaçao. This complex routing allows them to target Argentine users while bypassing local fiscal obligations and regulations.
A primary driver for this aggressive legal stance is the alarming participation of minors in unregulated gambling. Because these black-market platforms lack age verification tools and responsible gaming protocols, adolescents are exposed to significant financial and mental health risks.
The authorities argue that the current digital landscape allows minors to access these sites with a single click, necessitating immediate intervention.
To address this, the IPLyC has formally requested that ENACOM, the national communications regulator, implement a country-wide block on all 300 identified domains.
This move is part of a broader strategy that has already seen the province file over 120 formal complaints and conduct 50 search operations.
Furthermore, the province has successfully collaborated with Meta and the Association of State Lotteries of Argentina to remove over 100 social media profiles promoting illegal betting. Ultimately, provincial authorities are calling for a unified national strategy to combat these borderless digital crimes effectively.
Gonzalo Atanasof, President of the IPLyC:
We are not facing simple administrators of illegal pages but an organized criminal chain that launders money abroad operates with defined roles, evades taxes, and works outside the law.”
Gonzalo Atanasof proceeded:
“When we talk about teenagers betting, then we must address the problem from two viewpoints: mental health and security. These illegal casinos operate without any kind of supervision and let minors in with complete freedom. Kids today are just one click away because these platforms let them in.”


