Lottery Online

Lottery Online

Lottery is a form of gambling wherein the participants make an attempt to guess numbers in a draw for a prize. Lottery games are regulated in most countries. Lotteries are typically played by state-owned companies. In some cases, private business interests run the lottery alongside state-run companies. Private lotteries are also known as private or private-sector lotteries.

New Zealand

The New Zealand Lottery is a state-controlled lottery. Its proceeds are used to fund charitable and community projects. It is a separate Crown entity from Sport and Recreation New Zealand, Creative New Zealand and the Lottery Grants Board. Its games include the Lotto, Powerball and Keno. Lottery tickets are available at participating supermarkets and newsagents, as well as at authorised lottery retailers.

Liechtenstein

The government-controlled International Lottery in Liechtenstein Foundation (ILLF) operates the world’s first online lotteries and pioneered Internet gaming. ILLF holds several patents on its instant and lottery games and supports charitable projects both domestically and abroad. Despite the fact that most governments ban online gambling, lottery-style games are increasingly popular on the Internet because they require less capital than traditional casinos and are much cheaper to operate.

Canada

Canada has four nationwide lotteries: Lotto 6/49, Lotto Max (which replaced the former Lotto Super 7 in September 2009), Daily Grand and Millionaire Life. The games are administered by the Interprovincial Lottery Corporation, a consortium of provincial/territorial lottery commissions. The members of the consortium are the Atlantic Lottery Corporation (New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, Newfoundland and Labrador), Loto-Quebec (Quebec), Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation (Ontario) and Western Canada Lottery Corporation (Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, Yukon, Northwest Territories, Nunavut).

Ticket prices range from 150,000 to 300,000 kh, depending on how many tickets are sold during a given drawing. On good days Huong sells 250 tickets and makes a profit of about 11 US-$. But on bad days, she only manages to sell 180 tickets and has to make do with a smaller daily profit of about 8 US-$. Neither she nor her husband can afford to pay their bills without their monthly lottery income. Their day starts at 5 am with a breakfast of rice and vegetable soup before they start selling their tickets. During the 16-hour shift, they do not stop until the last lottery drawing has taken place and the prizes are awarded. Only then can they relax and have a home-cooked dinner. In a way, they are like the rest of the country’s lottery players who have to go through a lot of stress just to be able to buy a ticket for a chance at winning.

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