State posture profileNew Jersey

New Jersey digital reality posture profile

This page summarizes six tracked digital safety topics for New Jersey, showing where public legislative coverage currently looks more proactive, more reactive, broader, or thinner. It is a structural posture signal based on public disclosures, not a political or legal grade.

Last reviewed May 12, 2026.

Educational summary only

Not legal advice. Laws and enforcement change frequently. Verify current official statutes, regulations, and counsel where needed.

Overall state posture signal

Reactive-leaning posture with narrow tracked coverage.

Based on six tracked topics and public disclosures.

Low confidence6 tracked topics

Posture meter

Lean and breadth across six tracked topics. Not a quality or political score.

Reactive-leaning
ReactiveMixedProactive

Lean

Reactive-leaning

Breadth

Narrow tracked coverage

State/topic detailNew Jersey

New Jersey Prediction Markets law summary

Limited or adjacent coverage.

Based on adjacent fraud, privacy, impersonation, or child-safety coverage.

New Jersey's posture on prediction markets remains under review — the one cited court document could not be fetched on this run, leaving the record unverifiable today.

Educational summary only

Not legal advice. Laws and enforcement change frequently. Verify current official statutes, regulations, and counsel where needed.

Why this status

Based on adjacent fraud, privacy, impersonation, or child-safety coverage.

What this means

  • New Jersey has been an active state on this topic — regulators sent a cease-and-desist letter to at least one prediction-market operator in 2024, and there is federal litigation involving NJ's position — but the current legal status cannot be confirmed from the sources available on this review date. The 'under review' label here reflects a real gap in what could be read, not a finding about what New Jersey's law actually says. The underlying situation may have moved since the last entry. To get a current read, the Third Circuit's published opinion and the NJ Division of Gaming Enforcement's public notices are the places to check — links are on this card.

What to do next

  • Open the Third Circuit PDF link directly in your browser to read the KalshiEX v. Cafferelli opinion — it may load cleanly even though the automated fetch failed. For NJ's regulatory side, the NJ Division of Gaming Enforcement (nj.gov/oag/ge) publishes cease-and-desist letters and enforcement notices; search there for any Kalshi or prediction-market filings dated 2024 or later.

Citation-grade sources

Official sources

1
  • 3rd Cir. opinion (KalshiEX v. Cafferelli)

    Official text

    Citation: Fetch returned HTTP 4xx — no body could be read. Source is cited in the existing record but its current text is unverified by this run.

    Observed: 2026-05-12

    Fetch returned HTTP 4xx — no body could be read. Source is cited in the existing record but its current text is unverified by this run.

    Open source

Provenance

Source basis

Official/public links curated

Confidence

Low confidence

Review scope

Adjacent categories reviewed for practical coverage signals

Last reviewed

May 12, 2026

References

  • 3rd Cir. opinion (KalshiEX v. Cafferelli)

    Fetch returned HTTP 4xx — no body could be read. Source is cited in the existing record but its current text is unverified by this run.

Notify me when New Jersey updates

We'll email when this state's posture record changes. No spam, unsubscribe in one click.