@guardian Update on this: Following a discussion with @Guardian, they’ve confirmed that no story on this topic was ever live on their platform. According to them, there was no deletion because the piece never existed in their publication.
🧵1/9 A major investigation into illegal gambling targeting British players was published in March 2025.
It documented 55 sites on the UK's own blacklist connected to one company.
It was read. It was shared. It was verified.
Then it disappeared from the internet.
Nobody seemed to notice. We did. 👇
6/9 Multiple sources have told us The Guardian published coverage of this story.
Connecting the network to its British dimension.
We cannot find it anywhere.
Guardian website. Google. Wayback Machine. Social media.
Nothing.
@guardian
@Joao_Mar2026@lynchjordan12 Yes no problem, I have no NDAs or any dealings with any business entities registered around the world.
Not so hard to answer questions straight forward
8/9The investigations that were suppressed still exist.
Read them. Share them. Keep them visible.
🔗 Investigate Europe original investigation: https://t.co/s1x49cvnLt
🔗 The DMCA suppression story: https://t.co/rEzzu7DUja
@sprintvalley It's an open secret for gambling giants, they spend billions of dollars on lobbying aka "Legal Bribing" to ease the regulations on Gambling. Happened in US, Happened in Brazil, Happening in UK.
[1] Wasn't planning on posting this but scale of the smear campaign against me (us) has really surprised me, especially before publishing anything secret or not available publicly. Here's a full story 🧵
Genuine question for the other side, if the affordability checks do not restrict users who can afford to make large deposits, what is the main issue you are against? Is it government overreach?
Speaking of funding, quick question did @Joao_Mar2026 receive any payment from BetConstruct to promote their NL BLACK MARKET "Social Casino" project? If you genuinely have no information about it please ask him to answer :)