Katie Paul, Director at the Tech Transparency Project and investigative expert on platform advertising and harms. She exposes how Facebook helps push casino-style apps, how ad tools and payment cuts fuel a predatory economy, and why legal gaps let harmful virtual gambling thrive across states.
30:32
forum Ask episode
web_stories AI Snips
view_agenda Chapters
auto_awesome Transcript
info_circle Episode notes
question_answer ANECDOTE
Player Lost Over Two Hundred Thousand Dollars
A player highlighted in the investigation lost more than $220,000 chasing virtual chips in games advertised as free.
The games begin free but push purchases when free chips run out, creating catastrophic losses for some users.
insights INSIGHT
Meta Profits From Attention And Data
Meta profits by extracting both attention and data to run targeted ads that fuel casino-style apps.
Facebook's Gaming section and a dedicated Casinos tab let developers access massive reach and precise ad targeting to find susceptible players.
insights INSIGHT
Platform Is Part Of The Casino Funnel
Facebook doesn't just host social casino apps — it sells advertising that pushes users to them and charges developers for that reach.
Developers buy ads on Meta to drive installs, then monetize players inside games while Meta takes a cut of both ad and payment revenue.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
What part of late stage capitalism is this? A new investigation finds that casino-style apps promoted on Facebook can drain players’ real money—while Meta Platforms collects advertising revenue and a cut of in-app purchases.For years, Meta Platforms has insisted it’s just a neutral platform; a place where other companies build apps and connect with users.But a new investigation suggests something very different.According to reporting from the Tech Transparency Project, Facebook is helping fuel a booming ecosystem of “free-to-play” casino games that critics say function a lot like gambling, except with far fewer rules.The house always wins here because you cannot win your money back. And for some players, the financial damage can be staggering.One player highlighted in the report says he lost more than $220,000 chasing virtual chips in casino-style games that advertised themselves as free.What begins as harmless entertainment like spinning slots, playing poker, or collecting bonuses, can quickly turn into a system designed to keep players spending real money once their free chips run out.The investigation shows how Meta’s platform helps these apps reach millions of users.Developers rely on Facebook’s powerful advertising tools to identify potential players, target them with ads, and keep them engaged. Once someone downloads a game, the mechanics kick in: limited free chips, constant prompts to buy more, and reward systems designed to keep people playing.When players eventually spend money, Meta takes a cut—about 30% of in-app purchases made through its payment system, according to the report.In other words, the platform doesn’t just host the games.It profits when players spend.A Legal Gray ZoneEven more troubling, the report found that some of the games promoted through Facebook’s advertising ecosystem have been banned or declared illegal in multiple U.S. states.Yet they continue circulating widely across the platform.That’s possible because social casino games operate in a regulatory gray area. Many mimic traditional gambling mechanics—slot machines, poker tables, digital chips—but technically avoid gambling laws because players usually cannot cash out winnings for real money.The catch: players can still spend enormous amounts of real money buying chips that only exist inside the game.Critics say the distinction may be legal—but it doesn’t necessarily make the experience less harmful.The Bigger QuestionThe investigation raises a broader issue about the modern internet economy. Tech platforms often describe themselves as neutral infrastructure. They claim to be digital spaces where other companies build products.But when platforms help promote apps, target users, and profit from in-game purchases, the line between host and participant becomes harder to define.If a system is designed to keep players spending and the platform profits every time they do, can the platform still claim neutrality? Or is it part of the business model itself?On this week’s episode, I spoke with Katie Paul, director of the Tech Transparency Project, about how the investigation came together and what it reveals about the economics behind social casino games.We discussed:How Facebook’s advertising tools help these apps find and retain playersWhy some users end up spending tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollarsThe legal loopholes that allow casino-style games to operate outside gambling lawsAnd whether platforms like Meta can still claim to be neutral hosts when they profit from the systemBecause the question at the center of this investigation isn’t just about games.It’s about how the internet economy work and who benefits when users keep spending.