CEREUS PLATFORM DEVELOPED IN KOREA
19 December 2008
Tokwiro COO assures that players are safe on new
network
One of the more interesting industry articles this week
is an interview with Tokwiro Enterprises' chief
operating officer Paul Leggett conducted by Bob Pajich
on the respected Card Player website here:
http://www.cardplayer.com/poker-news/article/5721/coo-of-absolute-poker-and-ultimatebet-opens-up
In the interview, Leggett discusses in depth his trials
and tribulations, having been recruited into Tokwiro
early in 2008 to sort out the aftermath of the Absolute
Poker.com cheating debacle, only to be almost
immediately faced with a similar scam at UltimateBet.
One of Leggett's priorities had been to replace the
previously "entrepreneurially" focused management team
with one more oriented to "...security and compliance
and transparency and internal audits and things of that
nature."
The interview recaps the now well known facts
surrounding the twin $21 million cheating disasters and
how they were detected and resolved, the main point
being Leggett's assertion that all prejudiced players
had now been made whole by the company in its attempt to
get on with its business and create some space between
the scandals and its reputation.
The two operational companies have since moved to a new
Tokwiro network branded Cereus, and it was in answering
questions about this that Leggett revealed the
previously unknown fact that the Cereus software was
developed in Korea.
Leggett told Pajich that the Cereus venture was not
motivated by a desire to outrun the cheating scandals,
but was a business strategy planned for some time that
had been delayed by the effort required to overcome the
cheating issues.
"We were diverted by these scandals quite a bit, so that
put us off-track and delayed us implementing it,"
Leggett says in the Card Player interview. "But the real
reasons for it was to provide a better product and
experience for our players by giving them double the
amount of players to play against.
"And also, the operation efficiencies that we gain as a
company by cost-savings and having one platform that
we’re supporting, instead of doing it across two, and
it’s easier for our customer service department,
etcetera."
After discussing brand identity and target market
matters, Pajich asked Leggett about the new Cereus
software platform, and Leggett answered: "We have a
software development shop out of South Korea and they
developed the CEREUS platform.
"The security of the platform was tested by Gaming
Associates. But the priority for the platform was always
security and compliance of regulatory standards. We made
a lot of improvements to the security of hole cards, we
built a major layer of security, and this was really our
strategy, building multiple layers of security to make
sure nothing like the cheating of the past can ever
happen again.
"This new layer of security, which is called our
Security Center Software application, was built
specifically for the CEREUS Network. Essentially, it’s a
security framework for advanced fraud algorithms that
kind of alert our security team of any abnormal
behavior. Things like detecting abnormal winning
statistics or somebody who is multi-accounting or
somebody who is chip dumping and currently we’re
enhancing it with many new methods, things like
detecting bots. We can detect bots now, but we’re adding
in really advanced algorithms that will detect bots in a
different way."
Leggett adds that this, allied to a different management
team and company culture, and the fact that a huge
effort had been made to recompense cheated players, will
hopefully convince players that their poker at Cereus is
safe and fair. Referring to the changes, he said:
"Again, it’s the whole company, it’s the software, and
now we’re working on some advanced security initiatives
that I think will really help people to feel
comfortable."
As a purely subjective [editorial]observation, InfoPowa
found Leggett's rationalisations on the company's
actions - or the lack thereof - in pursuing the alleged
main cheater Russ Hamilton and others unconvincing and
even confusing. Obfuscating about Tokwiro being a victim
because it bought flawed software does not address the
issue about which players are still outraged - why
haven't the perpetrators who profited so handsomely from
these multi-million dollar frauds been hauled before a
criminal court or otherwise subjected to punitive legal
sanctions?
Leggett rambles on about the Kahnawake Gaming Commission
and its own investigations, but seems content to leave
the matter be with the repeated statement: "We’re simply
not judge and jury."
He says: "So I understand that the public wants us to
come out and make accusations and point fingers all over
the place, but, again, simply, we’re just not the judge
and jury. We’ve done our investigation, we’ve tried to
be as transparent with everything we could and the
gaming commission has done a good job at least naming
the one person they believed to be the main perpetrator
who was doing the actual cheating. And it’s very
possible, and I hope they will name other people, if
they can confirm (who they are).
"I know they [the KGC] released in their press release
that they are going to work with different police
forces. I believe they’re currently working with one and
they’re willing to discuss working with others with the
information they have. And we’re continuing to explore
what we can do specifically with the cheaters
themselves, but it’s very complicated and there are
jurisdictional issues, but our first priority was always
to get a name released who was involved and to get the
players their money back. And we’re talking about an
enormous about of money that we were able to refund
players and we’re happy with that. But it’s not over. We
just think we’ve taken some pretty big steps and made a
lot of progress so far."
It does not give the reassurance of closure, in our
view, as time ticks on.
The interview goes on to discuss the background and
Kahnawake relationships of Tokwiro's owner, former chief
Joe Norton and assure players that there is no special
relationship with the KGC, which regulates many other
online gambling operations.
Leggett ends the interview on an upbeat note, predicting
an exciting future for his company.
"I think our company has come through some very
difficult times," he says, stating the obvious. "It’s a
lot of new people and a lot of new blood and we faced a
major challenge and came through it and now we’re ready
to turn that passion and that energy onto growing the
business.
"We’ve got some pretty exciting things planned for the
marketing of these two brands. We really want to push
the envelope and let the world know we’re here. But,
again, the transparency and security is what were
looking to prove and show people that we’re leading the
industry there. We will not forget our past. We’ve
learned from this and fixed it and we want to ensure
everyone that it’s fixed."
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
More news here.
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