Current through Register Vol. 50, No. 9, September 20, 2024
A. Pari-mutuel wagering on historical horse
races shall only be conducted through the use of a totalizator or other similar
mechanical or electrical equipment.
B. The totalizator or other mechanical or
electrical equipment shall be available for testing under the supervision of
the commission upon request by the commission to ensure its proper working
order.
C. Wagering on historical
horse races shall be offered on terminals that include a cabinet in which the
electronics and other operating components are located. All terminals and other
equipment shall be subject to inspection by the commission.
D. The terminal cabinet and electronics
shall:
1. protect against electrostatic
interference by being grounded so that static discharge energy shall not
permanently damage or inhibit the normal operation of the electronics or other
components within the wagering terminal. In the event that a temporary
disruption of the normal operation of a wagering terminal occurs as a result of
an electrostatic discharge, the wagering terminal shall have the capacity to
recover and complete any interrupted wager without loss or corruption of any
control or critical data information. Each terminal shall be tested to a
maximum discharge severity level of 27 kilovolt air discharge;
2. not be adversely affected, other than
during resets, by surges or dips of up to 20 percent of the supply voltage. If
a wagering terminal is designed such that a surge or dip of up to 20 percent of
the supply voltage causes a reset, the terminal shall also be designed so that
a surge or dip shall not result in damage to the equipment or loss or
corruption of data. Upon reset, the wager play shall return to its previous
state or return to a wager completion state, provided the wagering history and
all credit and accounting meters comprehend a completed wager play;
3. have an on/off switch that controls the
electrical current installed in a readily accessible location within the
interior of the terminal so that power cannot be disconnected from outside of
the terminal using the on/off switch. The on/off positions of the switch shall
be labeled;
4. be designed so that
power and data cables into and out of the terminal can be routed so that they
are not accessible to the general public. Security-related wires and cables
that are routed into a logic area shall be securely fastened within the
interior of the terminal;
5. have
an identification badge affixed to the exterior of the terminal by the terminal
provider that is not removable without leaving evidence of tampering. This
badge shall include the following information:
a. the name of the terminal
provider;
b. a unique serial
number;
c. the terminal model
number; and
d. the date of
manufacture;
6. have an
external tower light located conspicuously on the top of the terminal that
automatically illuminates when a patron has won an amount that the terminal
cannot automatically pay or when an error condition has occurred;
7. be constructed of materials that are
designed to allow only authorized access to the inside of the terminal. The
terminal and its locks, doors, and associated hinges shall be capable of
withstanding determined and unauthorized efforts to gain access to the inside
of the terminal and shall be designed to leave evidence of tampering if such an
entry is made;
8. be equipped with
doors of a locked area that are designed to resist the use of tools or other
objects used to breach the locked area by physical force;
9. have external doors that shall be locked
and monitored by door access sensors. When the external doors are opened, the
door access sensors shall:
a. cause wagering
activity to cease;
b. disable all
currency acceptance;
c. enter an
error condition;
d. illuminate the
tower light at a minimum; and
e.
record the error condition. The requirements of this Subsection do not apply to
the drop box door;
10.
have external doors designed so that it shall not be possible to insert a
device into the terminal that will disable a sensor that indicates "door open"
without leaving evidence of tampering when the door of the terminal is
shut;
11. have a sensor system that
shall provide notification that an external door is open when the door is moved
from its fully closed and locked position, provided power is supplied to the
device;
12. have a logic area,
which is a separately locked cabinet area with its own monitored, locked door
or other monitored, locked covering that houses electronic components that have
the potential to significantly influence the operation of the terminal. There
may be more than one such logic area in a terminal. The electronic components
housed in the logic area shall include:
a. a
central processing unit and any program storage device that contains software
that may affect the integrity of wagering, including the individual play
accounting, system communication, and peripheral firmware devices involved in
or that significantly influence the operation and calculation of wager plays,
wager outcome display, wager result determination, or wager play accounting,
revenue, or security;
b.
communication controller electronics and components housing the communication
program storage device; and
c. the
nonvolatile memory backup device, which if located in the logic area, shall be
kept within a locked logic area; and
13. have a currency storage area that is
separately keyed and fitted with sensors that indicate "door open/close" or
"stacker receptacle removed," provided power is supplied to the device. Access
to the currency storage area shall be secured by two locks before the currency
can be removed. The locks shall be located on the relevant outer door and on at
least one other door.
E.
Critical memory requirements shall include the following:
1. Critical memory storage shall be
maintained by a methodology that enables errors to be identified, including
signatures, checksums, partial checksums, multiple copies, timestamps,
effective use of validity codes, or any combination of these methods.
2. Comprehensive checks of critical memory
shall be made following wager play initiation but prior to display of wager
outcome to the patron.
3. An
unrecoverable corruption of critical memory shall result in an error state. The
memory error shall not be cleared automatically and shall cause the terminal to
cease further functioning. The critical memory error shall also cause any
communication external to the terminal to immediately cease. An unrecoverable
critical memory error shall require restoration or clearing of software state
by an authorized person.
4. If
critical memory is maintained in nonvolatile memory on the terminal and not by
the server-based system, then:
a. the terminal
shall have the ability to retain data for all critical memory as defined in
this Section and be capable of maintaining the accuracy of the data for 30 days
after power is discontinued from the terminal;
b. for rechargeable battery types only, if
the battery backup is used as an off-chip battery source, it shall recharge
itself to its full potential in a maximum of 24 hours, and the shelf life of
the battery shall be at least five years;
c. nonvolatile memory that uses an off-chip
backup power source to retain its contents when the main power is switched off
shall have a detection system that will provide a method for software to
interpret and act upon a low battery condition before the battery reaches a
level where it is no longer capable of maintaining the memory in question.
Clearing nonvolatile memory shall require access to the locked logic area or
other secure method, provided that the method is approved by the commission;
and
d. following the initiation of
a nonvolatile memory reset procedure, the wagering program shall execute a
routine that initializes all bits in critical nonvolatile memory to the default
state. All memory locations intended to be cleared as per the nonvolatile
memory clear process shall be fully reset in all cases.
5. Critical memory of a server-based wager
configuration may be maintained by the server, terminal, or some combination
thereof. The critical memory related to each terminal shall:
a. be kept independent to all other wagering
terminals. If corruption occurs in any single terminal's critical memory no
other terminal shall be effected by the terminal's corrupt memory state;
and
b. be clearly identified as to
which physical terminal the critical memory represents, through unique
identification, such as serial number or other unique terminal hardware
identifier.
6. All
terminals shall be equipped with a device, mechanism, or method for retaining
the value of the meter information specified in
§13135 in
the event of a loss of power to the terminal. Storage and retrieval of the
accounting meters from a server is an acceptable method of retrieval.
7. Configuration setting changes shall not
cause an obstruction to the meters.
8. If the terminal is in a test, diagnostic,
or demonstration mode, any test that incorporates credits entering or leaving
the terminal shall be completed prior to resumption of normal operation. In
addition, there shall not be any mode other than normal wagering operation that
debits or credits any of the electronic meters. Any wagering credits on the
terminal that were accrued during the test, diagnostic, or demonstration mode
shall be cleared before the mode is exited. Specific meters are permissible for
these types of modes, provided the meters are clearly identified.
9. Terminals shall not allow any information
contained in a communication to or from the online monitoring system that is
intended to be protected, including validation information, secure personal
identification numbers, credentials, or secure seeds and keys, to be viewable
through any display mechanism supported by the terminal.
F. Program storage devices shall be required
to comply with the following.
1. All program
storage devices shall:
a. be housed within a
fully enclosed and locked logic compartment;
b. validate themselves during each processor
reset; and
c. validate themselves
the first time they are used.
2. Program storage devices that do not have
the ability to be modified while installed in the terminal during normal
operation shall be clearly marked with information to identify the software and
revision level of the information stored in the devices.
3. Server-stored information shall be backed
up no less often than once per day to an offsite storage facility. Offsite
storage may include storage through a cloud service provider if approved by the
commission. The server and offsite backup storage shall be accessible to the
commission and subject to third-party checks and validation.
AUTHORITY NOTE:
Promulgated in accordance with
R.S.
4:141,
R.S. 4:142 and
R.S.
4:148.