BEST AND WORST IN ONLINE GAMBLING
18 January 2008
Top industry information site takes a
retrospective look at 2007
2007 was a turbulent and difficult year for an online
gambling industry adjusting to the hostile official
climate in the key US market following the imposition of
the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act, but the
business continues to advance by diversifying into other
regions.
One of the consequences of the US legislation was the
departure from the US of large, publicly listed and
reputable gambling companies, making the American online
gambler more vulnerable to unprofessional and
integrity-challenged firms seeking to fill the vacuum.
This scenario makes the need for reliable information on
online gambling casinos, sportsbooks and poker rooms all
the more pressing, and the annual awards and brickbats
of influential information portal Casinomeister.com
released this week are a useful guide for gamblers,
affiliates and operators alike.
The awards are made in 31 categories and range from Best
Online Casino 2007 and its antithesis; through best and
worst player experiences to most significant industry
milestone and most spectacular blunder. The nominations
are put together on player suggestions and decided by
Bryan Bailey, the owner and webmaster of Casinomeister.
It's a fascinating stroll through key events and
incidents in the business over the past year and can be
found in full detail at
http://www.casinomeister.com/bestworst2007.php
The list is too exhaustive to cover in full, but here's
a few that InfoPowa picked out:
The Best Casino of 2007 award went for the fifth
consecutive year to 32Red.com, a Gibraltar-based online
casino and poker company that has been able to maintain
high standards of efficiency and customer service over
the years, generating a large and very loyal fan base.
The man behind the site's operational success, manager
Pat Harrison, received the Best Casino Manager 2007
accolade, too.
The other side of the coin is the Worst Casino for 2007,
which this year goes to a name familiar in a negative
way to many online players - the Costa Rican-based
Cirrus Casino in the RealTime Gaming powered Virtual
group (which is itself marked as "Worst Casino Group
this year) Economical with the truth about its ownership
from the get-go, Cirrus has become notorious for a
reluctance to pay players who win more than they have
deposited.
Best Casino Group this year goes to the
Microgaming-powered Jackpot Factory company, which made
a remarkable comeback after a black hat SEO disaster in
2006 that saw it universally slammed by the player
community and penalised by eCOGRA. "During this past
year, players often expressed their relief and gratitude
to the Jackpot Factory group; it had truly focused its
energies on player satisfaction. This is admirable since
it's not often that a group can recover so quickly. Keep
up the good work JF," says Bailey.
RTG powered Virtual group picks up the brickbat in the
"Worst Casino Group" category: "....they bring shame to
the entire online casino industry with their amateurish
"we've changed" mantra and constant screw ups. They've
been around for years and still haven't figured out how
to manage a casino right. But what incentives to improve
do they have? They're based in Costa Rica, so obviously
there is no licensing jurisdiction to monitor their
operations. They use RTG gaming software, and RTG has a
hands off policy towards player issues. So this is like
shooting fish in a barrel for Virtual. They can do
pretty much whatever they please," says an irate Bailey,
who has mediated many complaints from aggrieved players
in the past.
Back to the positive side, and the award of "Best New
Casino 2007" went to 3 Dice Casino, a new arrival owned
by a land gambling group in Belgium and using
proprietary software. With original and unique games, a
red hot and highly responsive manager and helpful
Support, the venue has received a continuous stream of
praise from the player community.
Worst Player Experience was generated by the RTG-powered
Hippo Jo Casino. Funded by Australian investors and
managed by an Aussie team with wide online gambling
experience, there were great hopes for this online
casino when it launched last year, but within months it
was in trouble and started giving its players,
affiliates and winners a hard time on payments and
customer service. The management should have known
better than to go into incommunicado ducking and diving
mode, but that's what they did, losing the respect of
colleagues who had praised their experience and
capabilities. And players remain unpaid, besmirching
their professional reputations.
Runner up in this category was a debacle on a much
larger scale and higher profile - the million dollar
Absolute Poker cheating scandal which saw the company
whacked with a $500 000 fine by its licensing
jurisdiction for a cheating through flawed software scam
involving insiders.
Customer Service is of paramount importance in the
online environment, and here Club World Casino took away
the top award for 2007. Bailey says: "If a player had a
question - it was answered promptly. If there was an
issue or player grievance, it was taken care of quickly
and fairly. Club World's support can be reached via
chat, toll free numbers in five languages, and of course
standard email. They are based in the UK - so their
knowledge and usage of the English language is pretty
good. No pigeon English spoken here. Good going Club
World, keep up the good work."
The UK Gambling Commission, which commenced operations
in September 2007 after years of preparation, receives
the Casinomeister Milestone of 2007 Award. "This
progressive development opened the way to true and
responsible regulation of Internet gambling in the UK.
It has reinforced the integrity of UK regulation with a
whitelist for UK advertisers, resulting in significant
movement to whitelist jurisdictions, and frantic
attempts by others to smarten up their previously
lackadaisical approach to player protection," Bailey
comments. "The whole British effort in this regard has
been well planned and impressive in a professional
sense, involving extensive consultation and
communication with all possible interested parties, and
the only dark area has been the high taxation imposed
politically on licensees. This is a true milestone in
the short history of online gaming."
Procrastination is recognised in the "Sitting on One's
Hands Award" which this year is a lacklustre tie between
Kahnawake Gaming Commission and RealTime Gaming. "It's
an absolute shame that this commission can't seem to get
it together when it comes to assisting players in a
swift and effective manner. They have made themselves
available for player issues, but so far it has not been
so productive," reads the citation.
"The Kahnawake Gaming Commission issues licenses to over
450 gaming entities. To not have an active call center
that can promptly answer player grievances in an
effective way is an indication that this licensing
entity has not taken its role seriously. The sad thing
is - they are one of the first jurisdictions to offer
gaming licenses to online casinos. They could have led
the way as a torch bearer for all to follow, instead
they let this opportunity slip through their fingers."
Online gambling turnkey provider RealTime Gaming get the
brickbat for the second time for a year and a half of
unproductive lip service over a promise to set up a
player dispute resolution service. Over half of Real
Time Gaming's licensees are in Casinomeister's rogue
pit, and two thirds of RTG casinos operate without
gaming licenses, says Bailey.
The key "Best Software" award this year goes to
Wagerworks, a US based company acquired by International
Gaming Technologies (IGT) a couple of years ago that has
been pumping out games that are familiar to hardcore
Vegas fans and refreshingly different for online
gambling slotsters. The games are easy to navigate and
are all no-download - the graphics are sharp and match
their land-based counterparts.
On the Dark Side - "Worst Software Provider 2007" -
Casinomeister has named Futurebet, a company that has
been around for years, yet never seems to "get with the
program" Bailey observes: "Failure after failure, their
poker rooms and casinos drop like flies - and there has
never been any safeguard for their players. Most of
their casinos are unlicensed (Costa Rica, Belize, etc.)
so their casino properties are at liberty to make rules
as they go along - or disappear without a trace. If a
software company dares to reap licensing and other fees
from their clients, then they better be able to protect
players from unscrupulous or mismanaged casinos."
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
More news here.
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