AGCO
AGCO Registrar and CEO Tom Mungham to Retire in Fall 2023
The Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario (AGCO) announced that Tom Mungham, its current registrar and chief executive officer, has decided to retire from his current roles this fall.
Tom will continue in these roles while the Board conducts its search for the agency’s next Registrar and CEO and will remain to support a smooth transition until that individual begins.
For over 33 years of public service, Tom has devoted his career to serving the people of Ontario. Before joining the AGCO, Tom worked in the Ministries of Correctional Services and Solicitor General before moving to the Ontario Provincial Police (OPP). Tom served the OPP in numerous key capacities, including as Chief Financial Officer and Commander of Business and Financial Services, and as Chief Learning Officer and Bureau Commander of Education and Development Services. In 2016, the OPP recognized Tom’s outstanding contributions by appointing him Honorary Superintendent.
The public service veteran joined the Ontarian gambling regulator in 2006. At first, he served as its director of licensing and registration before being promoted to chief operating officer. In 2020, Mungham was finally named the authority’s registrar and CEO.
“On behalf of the Board and staff, I want to thank Tom for his tremendous contributions throughout his 17-year career at the AGCO, and most importantly, for his exceptional leadership as our Registrar and CEO. We extend him our deepest appreciation for his guidance in fulfilling AGCO’s mandate with unwavering commitment to the values of integrity, respect, accountability, and public interest. We wish him the very best for this next, well-earned chapter,” Lalit Aggarwal, the AGCO’s chair, said.
The Board of Directors has begun its search for Tom’s successor. To ensure a thorough and professional search for qualified candidates, the Board has engaged an executive search firm to support this undertaking.
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AGCO
TitanPlay Highlights Responsible Gambling Approach in Platform Design
TitanPlay, a regulated iGaming operator in Ontario’s licensed market, announced its commitment to treating responsible gambling not as a compliance checkbox, but as a foundational principle embedded across all aspects of product design, marketing, and operations.
While Ontario’s regulatory framework — established by the Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario (AGCO) and iGaming Ontario (iGO) — sets clear minimum standards for licensed operators, TitanPlay says it views those standards as a starting point for its broader responsible gambling framework.
“For us, responsible gambling is not an afterthought, but the foundation on which TitanPlay is built,” said the Chief Compliance Officer of TitanPlay.
Designing for Player Well-Being from Day One
TitanPlay evaluates every product feature through a player-protection lens at the development stage. The platform offers clear, accessible limit-setting tools for deposits, losses, and time — available at registration and adjustable within prescribed cooling-off periods. Players also benefit from prominent real-time displays of account activity, friction-based interventions such as time reminders and proactive check-ins when play patterns shift, and seamless access to self-exclusion options.
Data-Driven Safeguards
Rather than using behavioral analytics to maximize short-term spending, TitanPlay deploys data to identify potential indicators of risk. When patterns suggest a player may be experiencing harm, trained Responsible Gambling specialists engage proactively in a personalized and supportive way, connecting players with available tools and independent resources such as ConnexOntario. All customer-facing teams undergo ongoing training aligned with AGCO standards.
Marketing with Integrity
TitanPlay applies rigorous internal review processes to all advertising and promotional campaigns, going beyond Ontario’s standards prohibiting targeting of minors, misleading claims, and public advertising of inducements or bonuses. The company prioritizes transparency, age-gating, and responsible messaging to ensure entertainment is never misrepresented as a financial solution.
A Shared Responsibility Across the Organization
Responsible gambling at TitanPlay is owned across product, marketing, compliance, and leadership — influencing roadmap decisions, user interface design, customer communications, and executive strategy.
The post TitanPlay Highlights Responsible Gambling Approach in Platform Design appeared first on Americas iGaming & Sports Betting News.
AGCO
Canada’s Ontario iGaming Market in 2026: Advertising Rules, Self-Exclusion and the Next Phase of Regulation
Ontario’s regulated iGaming market has moved beyond its launch phase. In 2026, the bigger story is no longer market entry. The focus has shifted to advertising oversight, player protection, and long-term regulatory credibility.
Ontario launched its competitive iGaming framework in April 2022. Since then, it has become one of North America’s most important regulated online gambling markets. Today, the province stands out not only for its size, but also for the way it is refining rules around compliance and responsible gambling.
Ontario’s iGaming market is entering a more mature phase
The market has already reached a significant scale. According to iGaming Ontario’s 2024–25 annual report, Ontario recorded C$82.7 billion in wagers and C$2.9 billion in gaming revenue during the fiscal year. The market also counted 50 operators and more than 2.6 million active player accounts by year-end.
These figures show that Ontario is no longer an early-stage regulatory experiment. It is now a large and established online gambling market. That matters because mature markets face different questions. At this stage, success depends not only on growth but also on visibility, public trust, and consumer safeguards.
Advertising rules are becoming more important in 2026
Advertising has become one of Ontario’s most important regulatory themes. Operators must still follow AGCO’s Registrar’s Standards for Internet Gaming, which set rules on marketing, inducements, and protections for vulnerable groups.
A new layer of scrutiny now adds to that framework. From January 1, 2026, Ad Standards began accepting complaints under the Canadian Code for Advertising of Gambling. This change gives the market a more visible complaint and review structure for gambling ads.
This development matters for several reasons. It strengthens accountability. It also shows that gambling regulation in Ontario is expanding beyond licensing and market launch. Regulators and industry bodies are now paying closer attention to how operators communicate with players and the wider public.
Ontario is entering a new stage of public scrutiny
As regulated gambling grows, public attention tends to shift. Early debate usually focuses on whether the market should exist. Later, it focuses on how the market behaves. Ontario now appears to be in that second phase.
Ad Standards’ review of gambling advertising complaints from April 2022 to April 2025 reflects that shift. In the early period, many complaints challenged the overall presence of gambling ads. Later, more complaints focused on the content of specific ads. Ontario also generated the largest share of gambling advertising complaints in the most recent period covered by the report.
That change suggests a more mature public conversation. People are no longer reacting only to the existence of the market. They are paying closer attention to how the market presents itself.
Centralized self-exclusion marks a major regulatory step
Ontario is also moving forward on player protection. In December 2025, the AGCO announced standards for a centralized self-exclusion program for iGaming. iGaming Ontario has also identified this initiative as a major strategic priority.
This step matters because it moves the system beyond operator-by-operator self-exclusion. A centralized model can create a more consistent approach across the regulated market. It also shows that Ontario is trying to strengthen responsible gambling tools in practical ways, not only through policy language.
For the industry, this signals a broader shift. Ontario is no longer focused only on market growth. It is also building the infrastructure needed for long-term oversight and safer play.
Strong channelization does not end the policy debate
Ontario has performed well on channelization. According to an AGCO-commissioned Ipsos study, 86.4% of Ontario online gamblers used regulated sites in early 2024. iGaming Ontario later reported an 83.7% channelization rate for 2024–25, noting that the change remained within the survey’s margin of error.
These numbers matter because they show that the legal market is attracting users away from unregulated alternatives. That is one of the main goals of a regulated online gambling model.
Still, strong channelization does not settle every issue. Once a regulated market captures most of the activity, expectations rise. Policymakers, media, and the public begin asking harder questions about advertising pressure, player safety, and the overall tone of the market. Ontario is now entering that stage.
Why Ontario matters for the wider Gaming Americas market
Ontario remains one of the clearest case studies in North America. It shows what happens after a successful market launch. Many jurisdictions still focus on legalization, licensing, and tax structure. Ontario shows that the next challenge is maintaining legitimacy once a market becomes large, visible, and commercially successful.
That is why Ontario deserves attention in 2026. The province is no longer trying to prove that regulated iGaming can work. It is showing how a mature market handles advertising oversight, public scrutiny, and stronger player protection measures.
The next phase is about credibility
Ontario’s next chapter will likely depend on balance. The market must remain competitive and attractive to operators. At the same time, it must show that regulation can support player protection and public confidence.
That makes Ontario one of the most important gambling regulation stories in North America this year. The biggest question is no longer whether the model works. The real question is whether the model can keep its credibility as the market grows and public scrutiny increases.
The post Canada’s Ontario iGaming Market in 2026: Advertising Rules, Self-Exclusion and the Next Phase of Regulation appeared first on Americas iGaming & Sports Betting News.
AGCO
AGCO Removes Cap on Seller Commission for Charitable Lottery Products
The Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario (AGCO) has updated several lottery policies to remove the cap on seller commission for Paper Raffles and Media Bingo, along with removing the prohibition on Catch the Ace paper lotteries, to align with other charitable lottery products.
Licensed charities may now negotiate commissions directly with sellers and determine commissions, provided they are reasonable and tied to the cost of service provided by the seller.
These updates further the AGCO’s commitment to adopt an outcomes-based regulatory approach and reduce burden for the charitable gaming sector. Local charitable organizations will have greater flexibility to make decisions that best serve their fundraising objectives.
Important Reminders
• Charities must still receive approval for other expenses incurred under their licence and retain receipts for seller commission paid.
• Licensing authorities will not require documentation to be submitted as part of the application process, however, charities are still subject to audit to determine compliance.
• Charities are reminded of their legal requirement to meet their obligations under the Criminal Code and with respect to conducting and managing a charitable gaming scheme.
• As with all licensed charitable lottery events, charities must take the necessary steps to ensure that they are conducting and managing the lottery event within Ontario.
For charitable gaming-related inquiries, email an AGCO Eligibility Officer at [email protected] or call AGCO Customer Service at 1-800-522-2876, Monday to Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
The post AGCO Removes Cap on Seller Commission for Charitable Lottery Products appeared first on Gaming and Gambling Industry in the Americas.
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