GLI welcomed hundreds of regulators to its 20th annual North American Regulators Roundtable March 4 – 5. Held at the Tropicana Las Vegas, the educational and networking event featured leading subject-matter authorities from around the world addressing the gaming industry’s most timely topics.
On August 7th, 2020, GLI was voted Best Testing Laboratory in the Baltics and Nordics 2020. Visit the organizer's award page here.
Peter Wolff, Director of Global Technical Compliance, was named to Global Gaming Magazine’s “2020-2021 Class of Emerging Leaders of Gaming 40 Under 40.”
Casino Journal Top 20 Most Innovative Gaming Technology Award Winner - Remote Test Bed Technology
GLI has been authorized to test and certify iGaming and Mobile Sports Betting in Michigan
On October 7, 2020, GLI was approved by the Tennessee Education Lottery as an authorized testing lab for sports wagering platforms and related products.
On November 3, 2020, Gaming Laboratories Europe® was authorized to test and certify iGaming, VLT, and casino products for Greece.
They are owned by James Maida, a former New Jersey Gaming Commission attorney
“(GLI®) President and CEO James R. Maida, Esq. for his lifetime of achievements in the overall gaming industry.
Brown & Weinraub’s honoree announcement said, “(Maida’s) reputation as a visionary in the gaming industry is well deserved, and he exemplifies the forward-looking philosophy that has led to GLI being responsible for 90 percent of the world’s testing on gaming equipment.”
Maida began his professional career in the gaming industry testing equipment with the New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcement in Atlantic City. He left the Division to study law and begin an independent game testing and consulting business. GLI was co-founded by Maida and Paul J. Magno in 1989, and since then, the company has grown to more than 950 employees located in 20 offices on six continents.
Wow. Just wow.
A link between the “frightening” covid numbers and the “many” Biden votes.
Our Democrats, FBI and DOJ are dirty, shameless co-conspirators in the gaming of America. In gaming you, me and our children.
I’m not saying it’s mafia, but it’s mafia.
I find it completely implausible how a machine performing any task whatsoever can be certified for anything, when the machine allows software to be updated on the fly, or at any random point in time. If you go to the post office and look at the scales, you will see that the scales are primarily a PC. With the right software, they could be turned into a pong game or a flight simulator.
Nothing wrong with that. The people who write software for gambling machines should be the ones writing it for voting systems. Especially those certified by the Nevada Gaming Commission.