Comment Re:Fed up (Score 1) 379
Its simply law of large numbers and probabilities combined with basic psychology.
You are very likely, due to the nature of such sites, which we already covered, both a beneficiary and a victim of things that go on there, but you simply do not perceive it being so due to your, by very nature of personal perception, very narrow sample of the data that comprises the whole of the process.
OK, if I am both a beneficiary and a victim of these shenanigans, such that they roughly cancel each other out, then my results (over the long term) should not be much affected by them, right? Remember I am not claiming that absolutely 0 cheating occurs; merely that the amount of cheating and/or collusion is minute. I do have a narrow sample of data as a fraction of all data which is available. But I do have an amount of data on my play which I believe is statistically significant.
Also one must take into account that the people truly victimized (i.e. to the point that they actually strongly object) comprise a minority on a typical site and as soon as they take action, they get kicked out and their voices muted as far as the site is concerned. And so unless you happen to have a personal relationship outside of the site, you'll never know.
I know of no large, reputable site where people have their accounts confiscated for merely complaining. Certainly the support staff will become acquainted with the most vociferous and vocal conspiracy-theorists, and perhaps will not treat their concerns as seriously as they would a more rational customer; but it is not the policy of the large poker rooms to penalize players who make frivolous complaints to support. If you do have evidence of such actions being taken against yourself or other players, I recommend you start a thread in a popular poker forum so that the community can be informed of it.
This dynamics is very common. Lots of people get abused by large companies, like for example cellular carriers, and yet the number of customers lost is a tiny proportion of the customers kept by inertia, marketing gimmicks and so on. The level of "dissatisfaction" required to drop out of a social addiction, like incessant texting to friends or, say, playing online poker is quite high.
That abuse is possible is not evidence that abuse is happening.
As I tried to point out to you, there is no way to ensure even most basic "fairness" in most online games, simply due to the nature of communications and the technology involved. Even the best meaning casino operator is powerless to do so, and worse, his attempts at policing his casino would by definition lead to witch hunts (which is what you were proposing), making a mockery of the whole notion.
I have stated several means by which poker room operators can take action against collusion/fraud/cheating. I am not claiming that every single instance of cheating can be avoided; rather I'm claiming that the level of cheating can be substantially reduced by choosing wise policies and hiring competent game security personnel. The operators of these sites are by no means powerless in this matter. I do not think "fairness" is an all-or-nothing proposal. There can be different levels of fairness, and as I've pointed out before, a game where cheating occurs in 50% of hands is very different from a game where cheating occurs in 0.1% of hands.
So what you are really talking about here is perception of "shadiness", which can be a result of a successful campaign by a competitor or plain incompetence at public relations. Those who actually run shady operations are likely to appear the slickest and "safest" of all - its one of their top priorities, a prerequisite of the scam actually working.
Again, some scams can certainly happen due to slick marketing. But once the word spreads of their scams, other players will avoid the site in question. Good poker players form a closely-knit community and are quick to report and investigate any suspicions of shadiness. I'm not saying ALL poker sites are honest. But the overwhelming majority of them are. And such sites as are not operating fairly have their actions reported and discussed extensively.
Also, making money on poker is a rather curious thing.
That is, some people, due to combination of slightly better then average skill and copious amounts of plain dumb luck manage to get ahead in such environments. Unfortunately there is no way of telling how much the skill versus the dumb luck played a role.
Certainly there is luck involved. Players can look at their winrate/100 hands, standard deviation/100 hands and number of hands played in order to calculate their "real" winrate within certain confidence intervals. This allows them to estimate their level of skill. These mathematical calculations, together with other statistics can be used in an attempt to quantify and account for luck. It is true that nobody can get a 100% confidence interval for their winrate. But being 99% likely to be a winning player is pretty good, in my book.
A complete idiot, by pure chance, can win 1000s of poker games and then claim himself a poker genius. We will hear all about his great poker prowess, while a few millions of other idiots, following exactly the same procedure but not being so lucky we will never hear about. The idiot in question will then write inspirational books on the subject and become even richer selling his "The complete idiots guide to being a poker genius in 7 easy steps", gather cult-like following of religious zealots awed by his "genius" and things usually go down hill from there.
Anyone who purchases these "quick-and-easy" quides to winning poker is deluding themselves. I agree that most of those "publications" are scams. At the very least, a potential buyer should solicit independent reviews of any such book before buying it. One of the great things about poker is the sheer number of players who believe they are awesome, but in reality are horrible players. There is a price to be paid for such self-delusion, and the good players are happy to collect it.
Such is the nature of large numbers and probabilities.
The same pattern is plainly visible in other places: stock market, Forex, various business ventures. In every case the people in question, always, without fail, smugly attribute all of their success to their "skill" and "foresight" and no one seems to ask basic questions about all the fortuitous chances stacked one upon another that made their "self made" success possible.
Yes, there is a lot of variance involved in the outcomes of these kinds of decisions, and it is very easy for someone to delude themselves into thinking they are highly skilled in the endeavor in question. One thing which speaks in favor of poker in this regard is that it is possible to play thousands of hands in a week. So our sample size is larger perhaps than the financial wizards, who only make a few dozen or perhaps hundreds of trading decisions in the same timeframe.
Frankly, since I am quite familiar with game theory, as far as my understanding of the mechanics of online poker goes, there is no such thing as a "winning strategy", only a "loss management" strategy, since most players will use the same card counting bots, bet calculators and pop-pseudo-psychoanalysis of other players, leaving the luck of the draw as the only unbound variable.
Game Theory is largely overused by good poker players, except perhaps in the toughest high-stakes games. Remember that a GTO strategy should only be used when you think that your judgement and skill is roughly equal to or worse than that of your opponents. In lower stakes games, a good player is better off using an exploitative strategy which capitalizes on his opponents' mistakes. Also, the GTO strategy for most forms of multiplayer poker is not known at present (although some psuedo-GTO strategies try to approximate what a GTO strategy would be). GTO strategies have been found for some simplified versions of 2-player (heads-up) poker and for some "toy games" which bear some resemblance to poker. And I'm not sure really how "card counting bots" and "bet calculators" would be of much help to a poker player. Perhaps you are thinking of blackjack? Regarding the "pop-pseudo-psychoanalysis of other players", players display tendencies which are exploitable; such as being risk-averse, or betting a certain size with bluffs, but not with legitimate hands. I don't see how you can claim that there is no such thing as a "winning strategy" in poker? If all the players were roughly equal in skill, then that would certainly be the case. But the skill level of the players varies wildly; the average player makes exploitable mistakes to such an extent that a good player can win enough to overcome the rake.
That is why I am extremely weary of people claiming to be professional poker players.
This sounds like an ad hominem to me.
Actually the criminality comes from a simple fact that by playing online poker you are by definition knowingly patronizing an illegal enterprise. That is because no online poker company is legally able to serve the US market - hence all of these stories about jackbooted FBI thugs kidnapping foreign gambling casino executives while they are changing planes, etc etc, all the way to this very Slashdot story.
But if you do not believe it, go read up the very pages the FBI put up on these very seized domains this article is about. Note the section about accepting payments. It is referring to both collection of funds by the casino operators and gamblers receiving electronic payouts. There is no distinction.That warning is aimed directly at people like you.
Having already banned payouts from gambling comprehensively, banning of actual gambling explicitly is essentially an overkill and that is why only one state has done so.
That all depends on your interpretation of the various applicable laws. The FBI stating something does not necessarily make it so.