NOT A GOOD REFLECTION
20 February 2009
New poker survey shows that many online
players are suspicious of online poker websites
Trust is a critical element in online gambling, and
therefore poker site operators may be concerned by the
results of a new study by a British research company
that shows that as many as 50 percent of respondents
mistrust online poker websites.
The Great
British Poker Survey was carried out by the independent
research company 72Point and commissioned by
London-listed mobile technology provider Probability plc
as part of its preparations to launch a new head-to-head
mobile poker product (see previous InfoPowa report).
72Point surveyed a wide-ranging sample of over 2 500
poker players on the project.
12.5 percent
answered in the affirmative to the statement: “I trust
them, they provide a good service” regarding online
poker sites. 36.9 percent gave a qualified answer in
agreeing to the statement: “mostly trust them”, with one
or two doubts. Disturbingly, almost 20 percent (19.4
percent) said they mistrusted poker sites and had “a lot
of doubts” about them, and a further 31 percent of
respondents said they did not trust online poker sites
“at all”.
Reasons given by those with a negative
opinion ranged from not trusting the randomness of the
cards dealt online for (33 percent), to 32.3 percent who
said they were worried about the safety of their funds
and bank details. A fifth of respondents, 21.3 percent,
said they were concerned about regulation and 13 percent
said they were concerned about the use of “software
bots” online.
Customer service ratings for online
poker site operators were of average quality, according
to 51.8 percent of respondents, and there was a
widespread belief that online poker operators at most
sites used "house players" despite denials to the
contrary.
But when it came to choosing between
online and land poker rooms, a remarkable 36.7 percent
of respondents still rated Internet poker sites as
preferred poker venues, lagging behind only the runaway
favourite venue of poker in the home environment, which
appealed most to 57.7 percent of the players surveyed.
Only 5.5 percent chose land casinos or poker clubs, with
36 percent claiming that the intimidating atmosphere at
such venues discouraged them.
Probability plc's
CEO Charles Cohen, commented: “We don’t have any axe to
grind on this issue. In fact, the reverse is true - a
healthy poker industry is good for us because the more
people who are comfortable with playing remote poker the
more business there is for us to shoot for.
“Some
50 percent of players surveyed by the Great British
Poker Survey said they did not trust the online poker
sites. A third said they did not trust them at all.
Those figures are striking and came as a surprise even
to us. There is clearly an issue here that the industry
needs to address.”
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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