Increasing complexity of technical compliance

Charmaine Hogan, Global Head of Government Relations, Playtech

Regulatory recalibration vs overregulationJurisdictions worldwide are recalibrating oversight - refining rules, enforcement approaches and compliance frameworks to keep pace with digital transformation. At the same time, there are jurisdictions set for regulation in 2026 that present opportunities for operators and suppliers. Though regulation aims to protect consumers and channel play into the locally regulated markets, piecemeal measures and lifting rules that have lacked evidence risk stifling innovation and creating compliance overload without solving underlying issues driving out from the legal market players and operators. There is a clear disconnect between legislativ intent and industry understanding that requires improvement.Some of the challenges facing the industry include fragmented technical requirements, complex onboarding and restrictive product rules. Tension between those in political and regulatory circles will persist, especially where tax hikes and prohibitive measures collide with market viability. I expect that operators will recalibrate engagement models under tighter margins. Jurisdictions which have been trendsetters in progressive regulation will in turn inspire others to establish robust frameworks, while overregulation and escalating compliance costs poses a threat to competitiveness. Such issues underscore the need for holistic frameworks that integrate product design, technical compliance and player protection.AI and data driven player protection:In a data-rich sector, we will continue to see greater utilisation of data, behavioural analytics and machine learning for player protection purposes mirroring the kind of methods we have already seen applied in marketing. This will occur through either operator-own initiatives or regulatory mandates.One trend I find particularly significant is the shift from seeing detection as a regulatory requirement, to now emphasising interaction. This represents the next evolution and perhaps the blind spot that regulators have identified from operator data. Beyond Europe, Ontario and New Jersey are leading in this space, and I expect others to follow suit. The governance of AI and generative AI will become critical and will require transparency, explainability and ethical frameworks to ensure trust and regulatory alignment.Compliance and cybersecurity intensification:As digitalisation deepens, cybersecurity and cyber resiliency become non- negotiable. It is essential that both regulators and operators prioritize robust frameworks for data protection, fraud prevention and system integrity. Compliance will increasingly hinge on resilience standards, requiring operators to demonstrate robust security controls as well as the ability to recover and maintain service continuity. Additionally, compliance complexity will remain high, particularly around KYC and AML obligations, which continue to evolve with stricter verification and monitoring requirements, which will present opportunities for technical solutions as a result.Immersive experiences and market innovation:Opportunities lie in leveraging immersive technologies like VR and AR, as well as in live casino innovations. Consumer demand continues to fuel development of new games and innovative products, expect further evolution in Live Casino withenhanced streaming quality and voice chat features for instance, ever merging social interaction and entertainment, with player safety guardrails nonetheless.Demographic shifts amplify the need for nuanced regulation. Younger, tech-savvy consumers expect seamless engagement, while regulators correctly seek robust safeguards. Yet full-scale bans remain flawed policy where choice is restricted, research hindered and risks of harm not adequately addressed. Instead, collaboration between regulators, operators, suppliers and other stakeholders is essential to avoid siloed mandates and to foster evidence-based standards.2026's balancing act:For me, the sweet spot for 2026 lies in balancing consumer protection with innovation, allowing for competitive markets whilst safeguarding consumer informed choices. A long-term approach depends on appreciation of technical complexity, adaptive compliance and smarter not heavier rules.

"Jurisdictions which have been trendsetters in progressive regulation will in turn inspire others to establish robust frameworks, while overregulation and escalating compliance costs poses a threat to competitiveness. Such issues underscore the need for holistic frameworks that integrate product design, technical compliance and player protection."

In Brazil, per guidance from the regulator, paytables for online casino games must be visible to the player as soon as the game is accessed and not be hidden behind a menu or require some other action from the player. All game rules or language must also be exclusively in Brazilian Portuguese.