I just found out today about an app that lets you buy lottery tickets on your phone. When you win, the money adds up. Some people had trouble getting their winnings out before, but that might have been when the app was new and had problems. If the app is on your App Store, it should be safe. It makes playing the lottery much simpler, but it could also lead to gambling issues.
It’s really late, but it’s definitely not a scam; I work for someone comparable. Though we don’t sell data, we do make money from commissions on lottery tickets and from a fee to load balances onto accounts.
While it might go against the conditions of the lottery contract, that would be a matter of civil litigation between the operator and the app, it is unquestionably not unlawful anyplace. In every instance, the ticket that is kept in trust belongs to you.
If you’re interested in learning more non-proprietary details, please PM me.
Hey Jenner On an average day, how many tickets can you guys print? I was wondering if it is possible to print 10,000 tickets at once for my app, which makes use of JackPocket’s API.
@Jennifer Depends hugely on the jurisdiction and the specifications of the lottery terminal.
But the tickets do indeed need to be printed one by one. I’m going to be a bit cagey with details beyond that. Jackpocket probably couldn’t a single order that large in most states. Probably in NY though