I don't see anything wrong with being a "professional player", and many poker players ARE "professional".
A professional player simply plays to win, and whether casino or poker, will play a tight game.
This is different:-
That's fraud, and using proxies and different internet cards is designed to disguise this. This is not just being a "professional player", but is more the "professional fraudster", like a poker player that decides his own skills are not enough, so cheats by using bots, or malware to peek at the hole cards of other players.
I am not sure "syndicate" is the best way to describe this activity, as it can be confusing given that there are many lottery syndicates, but this is perfectly OK with the state/government lotteries.
This seems more about multi-accounting, and using "rented" sets of ID in order to carry this out.
It doesn't help that some casinos MISUSE the "fraud" accusation in order to void bets of perfectly legitimate players who just happen to have won too much, which results in a level of mistrust among players when casinos say they have been hit by a "fraud syndicate".
The other problem is that when there is a major "bust" of a syndicate of fraudsters, the innocent players caught up in it seem to have too much trouble getting a fair hearing, and often have to resort to third parties, some more effective than others.
For
RTG, CDS is about as useful as a chocolate teapot, and they have a broken website that currently blocks anyone from following up on a complaint, and they seem rather laid back about this fault, which leads some to believe it to be deliberate.
RTG casinos tend to operate from Costa Rica, where there is no proper government regulation, and no gambling license needed, merely a bog-standard company license that fails to offer the special levels of protection for players that is needed when such large sums of money are involved.
RTG casinos are not trusted very much, unless they have a long track record, and have gained accreditation by a respected body, such as Casinomeister.
Bookmarks