Thursday, November 11, 2010

FOX NEWS wanted my opinion on TV's "Wheel Of Fortune" Wonderwoman...So I Gave it To Them.

The other day I received an email from Fox News reporter Meaghan Murphy asking my opinion on whether or not Caitlin Burke, the young woman who amazingly solved the "Wheel of Fortune" puzzle with just one letter, somehow cheated. I told Ms. Murphy, "Of course she did!"

Here's the article Ms. Murphy wrote for Fox News

The Wheel Of Fortune contestant who stunned the world by solving a puzzle with just one letter has laughed off suggestions she cheated.

Caitlin Burke picked the seven-word, 27-letter phrase — "I've got a good feeling about this" — after selecting a lone letter "L".

US show host Pat Sajak was stunned, asking whether it was "the most amazing solve we've ever had". Viewers were also shocked. The video of Ms Burke's freakish effort spread quickly across the internet after airing last Friday.

But as online debate raged as to whether it was too good to be true, one expert has suggested the 26-year-old contestant had an unfair advantage.

"I think she cheated with help from someone on the inside who simply gave her the information beforehand," FOX411 reported professional casino cheating expert Richard Marcus as saying. What I can tell you is that the spinning of the wheel had nothing to do with it, nor was this a similar scam to what happened a few times on the show Who Wants to be a Millionaire? where contestants were getting help from the audience."

Ms Burke maintains she won her $900 prize and Caribbean holiday fairly and squarely.

"For those who think I cheated, I say, 'How?' I don’t understand," Ms Burke was quoted as responding. "I would love to know how people think I cheated at that game — like what, I had it written on my hand? How would I even know it would be a puzzle? Or what, I snuck backstage? I don’t even know how that stuff works. I mean, if I was cheating, I probably would have cheated in a smarter way and rigged the wheel so I made more money.”

The New York resident was even happy to give future hopefuls some tips.

"If you look at the end of a word and understand how letter endings work, you can work from there," she was quoted as saying. "For example, if there’s an 'N' in a word, there’s usually a 'G'. If there’s a three-letter word, it's probably 'T-H-E' — things like that." Common sense is underrated — you can really solve a lot by understanding the way words are formed."

My take: Well, common sense may be underrated but cheating is even MORE underrated!!!

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Can Casino Cheats Successfully Pastpost and Pinch Chips off gaming tables against RFID Technology?

Surprisingly, I am almost never asked this question by casino personnel when I give game protection seminars. This is probably because they assume that their tables are protected from pastposting (adding or switching chips after a winning outcome) and pinching (removing or reducing chips after a winning outcome) by gaming chips with RFID chips embedded inside them.

For those of you who do not know how RFID technology functions at the blackjack, craps, roulette and baccarat tables in casinos, it is rather simple. When players place their bets, the dealer pushes a button that activates the RFID mechanism. The RFID chip within the gaming chip registers on a screen at the edge of the table. So if you bet one $25 chip at the blackjack table, the $25 chip will register on the RFID monitor. If you bet five $5 chips, they will all register on the monitor. Same thing if you bet one $100 chip and one $25 chip. The point is that the RFID screen will tell the casino not only how much you bet but exactly which combination of chip denomintations you bet with.

So it this RFID game protection beatable? Can you still pastpost and pinch chips when the casino has your original bets recorded on the monitor?

You may be surprised but the answer is undoubtedly "YES!" I am not going to tell you exactly how it's done because casinos pay me for that type of information...but I will say that you have to set the casino up for this type of move when pastposting. When pinching it is a different story...easier.

If anyone reading this article really is intrigued how to beat RFID technology in this manner, I'll tell you what I'll do. If you tell me how you think it can be beat, I will tell you if you are right or wrong.

Tuesday, November 09, 2010

Was Anti-Sunglasses Cheating Crusader Negreanu Wearing Sunglasses in PokerStars TV commercial?

I recently heard that Daniel Negreanu, who sounded like he wants to all but crucify poker players wearing sunglasses at brick and mortar poker tables in his anti-poker cheating tirades, was actually wearing sunglasses in his latest TV ad commercial for the giant online poker site PokerStars. Now, I didn't see this TV commercial ad myself, so I would appreciate anyone reading this blog who did indeed see it sending me an email to confirm this unholy "sunglasses sighting"!

If it is true, I can only say what I have said before...that Negreanu is full of shit and has a BIG mouth. He is an integral part of the GSN poker TV show "High Stakes Poker," which for me is the biggest cheat scam in the history of brick and mortar poker. You can read about that here.

In any case, Negreanu, who has publicly stated that he considers wearing sunglasses at live poker tables a form of cheating, is making millions hawking the PokerStars poker room, and you can bet your sweet ass that if they want him to wear sunglasses for their TV commercials, Negreanu is gonna do it in a New York second...So much for his anti-sunglasses cheating crusade!

PokerStars' Lee Jones on Multi-Accounting and Online Poker Cheating

Lee Jones, a very successful poker player, poker author and the poker room manager at the biggest online poker site, PokerStars, recently had this to say about cheating in an online poker interview with Bluff Magazine:

BLUFF: Some issues that affect the online poker community: First, the number of bots who have appeared on poker sites over the years, including at Cake Poker. Do you feel that anonymous names and/or having constant name changes makes detecting them more difficult?

Jones: I think the external poker community often doesn’t fully appreciate the level of information that the sites themselves have. For instance, people occasionally ask me if, when one of our players changes his nickname, are we still able to track him. In fact, we don’t pay any attention to the player’s nickname - we don’t think of him by that nickname any more than you refer to your girlfriend by the color of blouse she is wearing on a given day. We have a unique numeric identifier that you get when you open your account at Cake and that’s how we know you forever.

I told you all that to tell you this: there are lots of ways to spot bad actors and many of them come from *inside* the poker sites. We have many techniques for detecting bots and, in fact, our head of security is a bit of a bot expert. Bots really don’t make very much money on an individual basis so to be at all cost effective, they have to scale massively. In fact, many of the bots that we’ve busted recently were actually losing players, but were marginally +EV with bonuses, rakeback, etc. The point is that once you start to scale massively, you become much more detectable. I honestly believe that bots are more of a theoretical problem than a practical one. We definitely shut them down, and we’re good at doing it, but from the player’s perspective, they should be putting their energy into beating the carbon-based opponents. Of course, if the bots are colluding, that’s a whole different ballgame, but collusion leaves its own set of tracks and we spot those too.

BLUFF: Another issue that affects online poker is the security of a site. UB is well known for their superuser scandals, and their lack of having SSL encryption. Shortly after that discovery, PokerTableRatings found a similar flaw in Cake Poker’s site, and there was suspicion that there may have been “superusers” on Cake who exploited that flaw. A few posters on 2+2 were going through the hand histories to try and determine if this was the case. What is the current progress on that investigation?

Jones: In case nobody reads beyond the first couple of sentences: it is true that Cake Poker had a security vulnerability in its server-client communication. That vulnerability was removed on August 5th, 2010. There is no evidence whatsoever that anybody exploited that vulnerability. I also think we should be careful about our vocabulary. UB/AP had “superusers” - which is a term I use for people who had access to every single hole card of any game they wished. The subsequent vulnerability on UB, which was also found on Cake, was of a very different nature. Properly exploited, it might have given a user access to the hole cards of very specific people who they’d have to find on an unprotected (almost certainly wireless) network.

So if you were sitting in a coffee shop that had free WiFi and you could find a Cake user on that same network, and you had the proper exploitation software, you could have seen that player’s cards for the period that he was playing there. That’s obviously a very different scenario from the Hamilton et. al. thievery at UB where they had complete unfettered access to the hole cards of any game they wished. I’m not for a moment excusing the vulnerability that we had, but I want to keep our perspective.

You are correct that we have instituted a major audit of the hands that were played during the time that the vulnerability was present. We had three different teams working on it independently. Two of the auditors - Steve Wood, a former PokerStars employee, and Jeff Williams, a well known high-stakes player - have reported back that they were unable to find any signs of exploitation. The third team, Noah Stephens-Davidowitz and Thomas Bakker, are running in-depth statistical studies. They have not made it all the way through all the data yet. However, in the hand histories they *have* been through, they have found no sign of any exploitation of the vulnerability. I’d add that this audit is, by far, the most through and transparent audit of online poker histories that’s been done in the history of the business, at least to my knowledge.

BLUFF: Over the years, several well-known players have been caught multi-accounting. Do you believe there’s a way to prevent further multiaccounting scandals from occurring in the future? I know in the past you’ve talked about your dislike of particular rules that you feel are unenforceable. [For example] the one player to a hand rule.

Jones: Yes, I believe there’s a way to prevent further multi-accounting scandals from occurring: stop trying to enforce this silly one-to-one mapping between human beings and screen-names. It’s the Internet, and being anonymous, or “shape-shifting” is trivial stuff. You can use multiple computers, multiple ISPs, VPNs, mobile devices. And heck, that’s just the technology I’m aware of and I’m far behind the times on Internet technology. Furthermore, it’s just going to get harder as more and more devices become Internet-aware and so on.

Sites making a deal about this are fighting a battle that they can’t win and is only going to become more futile as time goes on. We have so many truly legitimate issues facing us: the whole question of legality, protecting the fish (player anonymity), real cheating (collusion and financial fraud), etc. It is a poor use of our time and resources to spend all that energy on multi-accounting. Now, two things to make clear:

1. I never condone somebody breaking a site’s Terms and Conditions. If you play on a poker site, then you have, either implicitly or explicitly, agreed to a set of rules. If their rules say you have a single account that has a single name, and that you and only you play that account, then that’s the rule and you follow it. If you don’t like their rules, play elsewhere.

2. I am not including in the general multi-accounting argument the idea of multiple accounts colluding or playing in the same tournament together. That’s a whole different ball of wax, and IMHO, crosses a very different set of lines.

But I firmly believe that the whole multi-accounting issue has largely come from the player community. They get upset when they see that players who have been crushing the tournaments are doing this. But the best players are going to do well, no matter what.

Monday, November 08, 2010

Do You Know the Origins of the Roulette Number-Marker or Dolly?

On American and British-style roulette tables, you see the dealer spin the ball, call out the winning number when the ball drops, and then place a marker or dolly (some call it a chesspiece) on the chips in the box on the layout corresponding to that winning number (or in the empty box when there are no winning chips), right? And I'm sure some of you realize that the reason for immediately placing the number marker over the winning chips is to prevent pastposting additional chips onto the number.

But did you know that until 1957 there was no roulette marker or dolly on American and UK roulette tables? That's right. In the old days the dealer would spin the ball, then when it fell into the slot of a number simply call out that number and point to it on the layout, in similar fashion to how dealers run the game on the giant French roulette wheels with their chip rakes.

What brought the marker into existence?

In the mid 1950s, the Classon Casino Pastposting Cheating Team devastated casinos in Las Vegas, Cuba and Puerto Rico by attacking their roulette wheels with late bets after the dealer called out and pointed to the winning number. Casinos were desperate and tried everything to stop them. Finally, in 1957, a surveillance operator at the Sands casino in Las Vegas came up with the idea to prevent pastposting on roulette layouts by having dealers place a marker atop winning chips or on the naked number-box immediately after the winning number was determined. He--and everyone else in the casino industry--felt certain that this security measure would eliminate pastposting on the inside numbers of roulette layouts. Boy were they wrong!

Henry Classon and his brother Joe simply devised a way to pastpost chips underneath the marker. Read about it here.

Saturday, November 06, 2010

Major Poker Cheating Incident at Final Table of European Partouche Poker Tour!

Poker Cheating in major poker tournaments always happens despite tournament organizers' claims that it is rare. The big-time poker cheats are currently at it in Europe...The bigger question is: What type of major poker cheat scandal(s) will we see at this year's World Series of Poker final table, which is scheduled to kick off today.

Source: Online Poker News

Just as the most prestigious final table in the whole of tournament poker is about to get underway today at 12pm PT in Vegas, another final table has also been making headlines, but for all the wrong reasons.

Poker fans everywhere are now counting down the hours until the ‘November Nine’ begin their quests to become the next WSOP 2010 Main Event Champion, as well as take down the massive $8.9 million first place prize in the process.

In the meantime, however, another ‘November Nine’ across the ocean at the Palm Beach Casino in Cannes have just lost one of their numbers before the final table had even begun.

Although not quite as grand as the WSOP Main Event, the Partouche Poker Tour Cannes has still a huge €1,300,000 ($1.824,190) top prize, none of which will be seen by ex-finalist Ali Tekintamgac, who has been disqualified for cheating.

The 2010 WPT Barcelona Spanish Championship winner was lying 4th in chips when, according to the Partouche Poker Blog and other European poker outlets including Poker Nyhederne and 01men.com, damming video footage was produced showing Tekintamgac cheating.

Apparently, Ali Tekintamgac had been receiving signals and information on opponent’s holecards by phony journalists and bloggers, in order to gain a huge advantage over his unfortunate victims.

In fact, at an earlier EPT tournament in Tallinn, Tekintamgac had been at the center of a similar cheating dispute involving bloggers passing on information, who subsequently had their credentials revoked during the tournament. On that occasion Tekintamgac was allowed to continue and finished in 36th place for $10,329.

After the latest fiasco, it is believed Ali Tekintamgac is being investigated on charges of fraud by local law enforcement officers and if the allegations are substantiated, will likely be facing tournament bans from many major poker organisers at the very least.

As the WSOP 2010 Main Event final table in literally only hours away, Ali Tekintamgac’s alleged cheating antics have shone more than a little unwelcome limelight on poker right in the midst of what should, in fact, be it’s crowning glory.

Confessed Roulette Cheat Sahami Gets Ten and a Half Months in UK Jail

Bahram Sahami's lawyer presented his client as a desperate Iranian man seeking asylum for the terror in Iran, claiming Sahami is a dental technician who entered the UK in 1999 after fleeing Iran soon after his brother was killed by the government.

Sahami did spend time in an Iranian prison before he left the country. He quickly applied for asylum in England but his application was denied and so was a 2006 appeal. The lawyer, Andrew Hope, told the court that Sahami became a gambling addict out of desperation and blew all the money from the sale of his house in Iran before turning to casino cheating to try and recover the funds.

The prosecutor, Nicola Merrick, had a different view of Sahami, saying he was skilled at sleight of hand tactics to cheat the casinos. She even described him as a "slippery customer." She then reminded the court that when the police showed Sahami video of him doing the cheat moves at the Gala casino, the defendant denied it was him on tape. He steadfastly denied all charges before changing his plea to guilty in October.

The judge, Peter Testar, addressed Sahami with "It seems to me that you were an accomplished and determined cheat, as what the CCTV from the casino in Baker Street showed was you cheating in four or five different ways during the course of a limited period of time." He then gave him ten and a half months in jail, a relatively light sentence as I had suspected. UK justice is soft on casino cheats.

The fact that Sahami used several false identites to continue entering casinos to apply his cheating talents did not appear to weigh in on the sentencing.

Friday, November 05, 2010

Well-Known European Roulette Pastposting and Pinching Cheat to be Sentenced Today in London

Actually the famed roulette cheat, thirty-seven year-old Bahram Sahami, is originally from Iran, but he has developed a knack for cheating American-style roulette wheels in Europe. His specialty is pastposting or adding chips to bets after a winning outcome and pinching chips (removing from the layout) after a losing outcome. He is also a known chip thief, lifting chips from other players at the roulette table. Sahami has pleaded guilty to multiple counts of all three of these type of casino cheat infractions, and will be sentenced today at the Southwark Crown Court for 3 counts of casino fraud and cheating at gambling and two counts of thievery of casino chips.

Sahami was also skilled at using false identities to gain entrance to European casinos, something he had to be as he'd been barred by all UK casinos for past instances of cheating. Apparently he used a half-dozen high-quality fake UK driver's licenses and ID cards to fool casino reception personnel during 2009 and 2010, becoming a member of several UK casinos.

Sahami, whose average cheat move netted between $50 and $200, was last busted at a London Gala casino when he was observed pastposting on video surveillance tape. Tape was then reviewed on several shifts and more casino cheat moves were discovered.

My take: This guy seems like a skilled and busy roulette cheat, but maybe he didn't move around enough. It appears he overworked London and the rest of the UK casinos, which is a dumb move for even the best of casino cheats. He will probably get minimal jail time as the UK is not very harsh with casino cheats. As soon as I have the info on his sentence I will pass it along.

Wednesday, November 03, 2010

Singapore Dice Pastposter Cheat Gets Three Months in Jail For Dice-Cheating

A thirty-six year-old Chinese construction worker named Gu Xiao Dong got three months in a Singapore prison for trying to cheat the Marina Bay Sands casino by laying down a late bet in a sic bo dice game, which is the Asian equivalent of craps.

Dong pled guilty to attempting to cheat the dealer by laying three $25 chips on a bet after the outcome had been determined. The offense occurred last October 9th. Dong's had bet five $5 cips on a three-digit dice box combination, then suddenly removed his chips when the dealer pressed the dice ready to roll, as if changing his mind about the bet. But when the result came out he quickly replaced the bet with $25 chips on the winning combination. The dealer caught the move, which would have paid $750

The maximum jail term for this casino-cheat crime in Singapore is five years in prison plus a fine.

My take: Seems to me that all these casino cheats getting busted in Singapore are rank amateurs...construction workers, cashiers, bakers, etc. It makes me wonder just how much the REAL casino cheats are beating the twin Singaporean casinos for...believe me, it's a LOT!

Tuesday, November 02, 2010

Isle of Man is New Haven for Online Poker Companies...What is it Doing to Protect Players Against Organized Online Poker Cheating?

These days more and more online poker and casino companies are opeating out of the Isle of Man, off the coast of England, being drawn there by tax incentives offered by the island's authorities. However, questions have arisen as to the integrity of the island's online gaming services, especially in regards to online poker cheating scandals.

Some serious UK online poker players crusading against cheating, especially online collusion and bot-use to cheat honest players, have travelled to the Isle of Man to personally confront government administrators in charge of the Isle of Man's online poker legislation. In light of the recent online poker cheat bot scandal in China, these players have become very worried about large scale online poker cheating.

Steve Brennan, Director of Isle of Man Gambling Supervision Commission, said in response to these worries: "We try to stay one step ahead with the tracking systems to spot the patterns that would lead to collusion. We have the technology to stop them. I don't believe there is a problem with online cheats. There are always going to be some issues but they can be detected and dealt with."

My take: Can't really separate the Isle of Man Commission from any other online gaming commission, so I simply say, Let's wait and see what if any major scandals hit online poker sites operating in the Isle of Man.