CASSAVA CASINOS AWARDED eCOGRA SEALS

jetset said:
Am I to understand from the above that you accept that the regulations and services that eCOGRA has to offer constitute a genuine and useful initiative (obviously with the exception of the software validation on which you have focused your opposition?)

Yes. I've never had much to say on anything apart from the software aspect.

Or do you still contend that the source of the initial funding and the payment of inspection fees to an independent third party in regard to the Seal examinations invalidates the entire initiative, in addition to your stand on the software question?

If the software verification were transparent, with data and process in the open for corroboration by independent, reliable third parties (including and additionally posters here and elsewhere, and most anyone else who cared to express an opinion), then the funding is irrelevant. As I said long ago, I don't care if it's a Microgaming monopoly or every provider and casino under the sun; as long as the data / process is proven valid, it doesn't matter who shells out the money.

Do you have any evidence to suggest that it does anything other than what its (TGTR) inventors claim for it, or is the real answer "I don't know because the information is not available to me"?

How can I have evidence of what is unseen / unknown? You're asking for an impossibility. They are the movers, not me. I'm the observer. If they make statements that I consider invalid without verification and I believe others may, too, I state the objection - as others have. It's not beholden to me to prove PWC / Ecogra are doing or not doing anything. Its beholden to THEM to give the evidence for their claims. They may choose to take that stance - but I don't think it'll take them very far. It certainly won't help their credibility.

And as an obvious follow on to that question are Microgaming and CON games in your opinion and based on your information acceptably fair?

LOL, yes. And FWIW, I consider THAT "verification" to be worth a whole helluva lot more than statements from industry insiders based on invisible processes. Of course, my own opinion remains irrelevant as any kind of proof, but you understand what Im getting at.

Do you support the concept of player-friendly regulation as a necessary move forward in this industry from a player protection standpoint? Alternatively would you like to see the status quo continue, or would you prefer to identify some other equally comprehensive system?

I'm personally happy as things are. And of course, my own preference is for a player-orientated, independent of ANY compromise type organization such as the OCA project. THAT is pure regulation. I acknowledge SERIOUS teething problems and the huge credibility dent it took over the MG figures, but in terms of real "regulation", that is the way forward. At the same time, I have no problem with "player-friendly regulation as a necessary move forward in this industry", as you asked. It doesn't much concern ME, but players come in all shapes and sizes and there have to be benefits.

Are you prepared to accept the possibility that the directors Hirst, Galston and Catania are independent, given the information that has been provided on their role?

FWIW, I'm happy to give them the benefit of the doubt until I look into it. I've not looked at individual roles of individual members at all.

"Yes, myself and a few others will no doubt continue to call you and your fellows to task on the SAME matters every time you post the "More Coveted Ecogra Seals Awarded!!!!!!!" ads."

Interesting that you again admit to this spoiling strategy...

To call it a "spoiling strategy" is to give a negative slant very far from the truth. If things were as they should be with regard to the software verification I'd never have breathed a word. Nor would anybody else. Nobody is "spoiling"; they're airing valid opinions / objections.
 
caruso said:
Yes. I've never had much to say on anything apart from the software aspect.



If the software verification were transparent, with data and process in the open for corroboration by independent, reliable third parties (including and additionally posters here and elsewhere, and most anyone else who cared to express an opinion), then the funding is irrelevant. As I said long ago, I don't care if it's a Microgaming monopoly or every provider and casino under the sun; as long as the data / process is proven valid, it doesn't matter who shells out the money.



How can I have evidence of what is unseen / unknown? You're asking for an impossibility. They are the movers, not me. I'm the observer. If they make statements that I consider invalid without verification and I believe others may, too, I state the objection - as others have. It's not beholden to me to prove PWC / Ecogra are doing or not doing anything. Its beholden to THEM to give the evidence for their claims. They may choose to take that stance - but I don't think it'll take them very far. It certainly won't help their credibility.



LOL, yes. And FWIW, I consider THAT "verification" to be worth a whole helluva lot more than statements from industry insiders based on invisible processes. Of course, my own opinion remains irrelevant as any kind of proof, but you understand what Im getting at.



I'm personally happy as things are. And of course, my own preference is for a player-orientated, independent of ANY compromise type organization such as the OCA project. THAT is pure regulation. I acknowledge SERIOUS teething problems and the huge credibility dent it took over the MG figures, but in terms of real "regulation", that is the way forward. At the same time, I have no problem with "player-friendly regulation as a necessary move forward in this industry", as you asked. It doesn't much concern ME, but players come in all shapes and sizes and there have to be benefits.



FWIW, I'm happy to give them the benefit of the doubt until I look into it. I've not looked at individual roles of individual members at all.



To call it a "spoiling strategy" is to give a negative slant very far from the truth. If things were as they should be with regard to the software verification I'd never have breathed a word. Nor would anybody else. Nobody is "spoiling"; they're airing valid opinions / objections.

From your responses to my questions above, Caruso I believe it is fair to say that your opposition to eCOGRA is not the concept, funding, regulations or infrastructure, but is focused on the transparency or rather lack thereof of the PwC software verification system. Your contention is that there is insufficient information available for you to say one way or another that it is inherently good or bad, and this invalidates the entire initiative.

I don't see eCOGRA failing, and it would be a pity if it did because imo it offers the player the real benefit of a safer and better gambling experience.

Reading through your responses above outlining your personal disclosure requirements from PwC in this connection, I very much doubt that these will be met for the third party proprietary reasons discussed previously, and PwC's continued silence on the subject would seem to confirm that.

It unfortunately creates something of a stalemate in this exchange, because eCOGRA and its not inexperienced or disreputable members are clearly comfortable that the PwC arrangement provides a satisfactory level of games fairness. They are therefore unlikely to switch to an alternative like the Truegambler OCA, which is unproven, has a patchy record since launch, comes from a largely unknown source and appears to be inadequately funded and in need of some sort of big-name verification itself.

I think that your personal opinion that regulation in the industry is unnecessary is at variance with the views of many experts in this business for reasons relating to better player protection and credibility, but we can put that aside for the moment.

I believe that your repeatedly stated intention to post your adverse opinion of eCOGRA every time a release from that organisation appears does constitute a "spoiling tactic" if those releases are legitimate informatives for the industry. You have voiced your opposition and if there is nothing further to add, this is deliberate "spoiling" in my opinion.

Speaking personally, I am not going to be drawn into a futile, time-wasting and similarly repetitious argument every time you and your supporters adopt such a tactic, so we are left with a generally unsatisfactory situation that does not further the issue of regulation or player protection at all.

Since you appear to claim wide support from the player community I would suggest to you that there may be a more constructive approach to breaking this deadlock.

Frame a petition covering the sort of credibility for software verification that the players feel eCOGRA should have, propose a player spokesman, mobilise widespread support for it and open a dialogue with eCOGRA itself as the player's representative?

That would seem to me to be a more productive approach than bad-mouthing eCOGRA every time its name appears.
 
I think it was something the meister recently said that made me wonder what is it that the Nevada Gaming Control Board does that seems to allow most people to believe that every game in every casino is fair all the time?

Do we know exactly what laboratory tests are run on the slot chips and that it is that chip that ends up in a machine? Do they run chi-square tests on card distributions - I think not. Are the members of the Commission paid by the casinos? Basically, I'd say yes. Do we have access to whatever audit papers are produced in audits? Don't know. If we did, what would that prove anyway?

In other words, I've always felt that no matter how much is shown or proved there can always be an argument that it is not enough or the process may be defective. Would I like to see more? Sure I would. Will it ever be enough? No, it never will. You may as well try to prove God exists.

So, no matter what happens, either you believe or you don't. Ultimately, it's an act of faith. Believe whatever you want.
 
The Nevada Gaming Commission has quite detailed publicly available documents on casino procedures, internal audit standards and slot machine specifications. I have not found anything on randomness testing, except lots of references by online casinos to unspecified Nevada Gaming Commission standards of randomness. For card games the best guarantee is that the shuffle happens right in front of the players, although I have read someone's account of a special shuffle in a Far Eastern casino, which was designed to give an unfavourable deck to the players.
 
jetset said:
Frame a petition covering the sort of credibility for software verification that the players feel eCOGRA should have, propose a player spokesman, mobilise widespread support for it and open a dialogue with eCOGRA itself as the player's representative?
I nominate caruso as transparency advocate for players.
 
jetset said:
It unfortunately creates something of a stalemate in this exchange, because eCOGRA and its not inexperienced or disreputable members are clearly comfortable that the PwC arrangement provides a satisfactory level of games fairness.
However reputable and good they are, they are not infallible. Judging by their biographies, they don't have mathematical training, so a mistake in the definition of game fairness got past them. I found it and it will be fixed, so I have had to shelve my plans for ecogra compliant craps with increased house edge. :)

TGTR is not open to scrutiny, so if there is a mistake in it, it may not be found.
 
LOL, I think GM's nomination contained the tiniest pinch of salt, so I don't forsee an onset of invisibility for the time being at least. And in case I'm in error regarding the salt content, I have to say I possess neither the time nor the tidy mind for such a lofty task. However, I WOULD be happy to get together a summary, reasonably representative of the general concerns expressed, and Email it to the appropriate person, if Jetset can provide me with a name and an Email address. I would also happily post the person's answer, assuming he were in agreement. That wouldn't be a bad compromise.

Jetset said:
From your responses to my questions above, Caruso I believe it is fair to say that your opposition to eCOGRA is not the concept, funding, regulations or infrastructure, but is focused on the transparency or rather lack thereof of the PwC software verification system. Your contention is that there is insufficient information available for you to say one way or another that it is inherently good or bad, and this invalidates the entire initiative.

That's about it. A more accurate wording would be: "Your contention is that since neither the data nor the processes involved in collecting it are available for public scrutiny, this leaves us being required to accept effectively uncorroboratable statements on faith and a such invalidates the entire initiative". And yes, I agree on the stalemate remark. Honestly, I never saw any other likely result. They were never going to open these things up - and I make no apology for drawing my own conclusions as to why.

Good points from GM about the inadequacy of the NGC comparison. It's quite tricky to rig a dealt blackjack game, at least in Modern Vegas.
 
GrandMaster said:
The Nevada Gaming Commission has quite detailed publicly available documents on casino procedures, internal audit standards and slot machine specifications.

Yes, quite detailed procedures of what an auditor is supposed to do but how do we know they are actually competently done? Just because an auditor checks the right block does not mean he did the work.

And, even if they are, you'll never know when you're being dealt seconds in a pitch game anyway. Or that the shoe is legit, or whether the dealer dropped a card in the wastebasket, or whether the random draw for a car is fixed.

Notwithstanding, the more detail provided about TGTR, the better. If, a year from now, there is no more detail than we currently seem to have, I'll be more than a little disappointed.
 
caruso said:
A more accurate wording would be: "Your contention is that since neither the data nor the processes involved in collecting it are available for public scrutiny, this leaves us being required to accept effectively uncorroboratable statements on faith and a such invalidates the entire initiative".

Why didn't you feel this way the day after True Gambler released his results? On that day, you had complete faith in every erroneous conclusion he put forth stating "This is indeed the UNBELIEVEABLE conclusion:... Microgaming is rigged. Now it's official."

People believe what they want to and that's OK.
 
Clayman said:
Yes, quite detailed procedures of what an auditor is supposed to do but how do we know they are actually competently done? Just because an auditor checks the right block does not mean he did the work.

And, even if they are, you'll never know when you're being dealt seconds in a pitch game anyway. Or that the shoe is legit, or whether the dealer dropped a card in the wastebasket, or whether the random draw for a car is fixed.

Clayman, using this logic, how could we trust ANYONE who certifies the games are fair, whether their methodology is fully disclosed or not? If you doubt everyone's audits, then no certification, no matter how detailed or transparent, would be acceptable.
 
jpm said:
Clayman, using this logic, how could we trust ANYONE who certifies the games are fair, whether their methodology is fully disclosed or not? If you doubt everyone's audits, then no certification, no matter how detailed or transparent, would be acceptable.

Exactly. We can't. Cheating occurs every day in Nevada casinos but I never think I'm being cheated when I'm there. Even if one believes every audit, it would only prove the games were possibly fair then but not, necessarily, now.
My point is that, ultimately, we choose to believe what we want when we play tomorrow. We will never have absolute certainty, whether it's a Big 8 accounting firm auditing Raytheon's books or whether any software provider is fair. Shareholders suing auditors is par for the course and proves nothing. I used to work for a multi-national conglomerate with $2 billion in sales that ended up on the cover of Business Week magazine before we filed bankrupcty, all with financials certified by auditors. Of course they were sued and deservedly so. But I choose to believe these are the exceptions to the rule.
Do you think the money in our checking accounts is real? Only if we all don't try to get green cash tomorrow at 9 AM.
It's tough enough just convincing everyone as to whether Neteller has a legitimate random draw or not, let alone that on-line gambling experience is fair. Regrettably, we don't live in a perfect world.

But we try to get as close as we can and that's a good thing.

I do think eCogra can get closer than they are. And, for now, I think, and hope, they eventually will. If not, I'll most likely continue to believe anyway chances are good I'm getting a fair game in Vegas and on the Internet despite also knowing it's possible I'm not.
 
GrandMaster said:
I nominate caruso as transparency advocate for players.

From this I take it that Grandmaster has the same attitude to eCOGRA that Caruso has - if you can be personally comfortable with the software verification you have no other serious beefs with eCOGRA.

However, I think you need a little more organisation of effort than simply making ad hoc nominations on a single message board if you are to have credibility.

There are hundreds of players (and I include all genuinely concerned and interested posters in that) on the leading message boards, and if you can organise yourselves so as to marshal a strong representation from this audience, an open dialogue with eCOGRA may be the most powerful and constructive thing you have done thus far....and have the best chance for success.

It may require Grandmaster, Eek, Cipher, DaveR, DirkD or one of Caruso's other supporters to work those boards from which Caruso is excluded but that should not present too great a problem.

Bethug - with respect, you can be part of the problem or part of the solution. Taking your attitude of total opposition to eCOGRA is not going to make this initiative go away and it certainly will not take this debate further forward imo.

"And yes, I agree on the stalemate remark. Honestly, I never saw any other likely result. They were never going to open these things up - and I make no apology for drawing my own conclusions as to why."

Caruso, you may well impose your own personal views and conclusions on this issue, but that is all they remain and that does not make your opinion fact.

IMO, this is not a promising way to kickstart an initiative that shows eCOGRA you speak for a significant number of people who share your views to the extent that they should consider an approach more in line with your thinking.

This could entail expense and a significant policy shift from their obvious present comfort level with the professional integrity and honesty of a major third party service provider, and the level of support for your suggestions would definitely be a consideration.

We all have busy lives, but many people in this industry make space for voluntary causes in which they strongly believe.

Your personal views and position are well established, but in the present impasse I am suggesting the more constructive course of you and your supporters taking the time and trouble to assess public opinion on eCOGRA and then act on it.

If this public opinion conforms to your views then taking the issue to a more productive level than hostile message board posts would be a valuable move forward.
 
GrandMaster said:
However reputable and good they are, they are not infallible. Judging by their biographies, they don't have mathematical training, so a mistake in the definition of game fairness got past them. I found it and it will be fixed, so I have had to shelve my plans for ecogra compliant craps with increased house edge. :)

TGTR is not open to scrutiny, so if there is a mistake in it, it may not be found.

This, and for reasons of independent conduct is clearly why eCOGRA has outsourced software verification, inspection and technical monitoring to Pricewaterhouse Coopers, who apparently do have the requisite professional capabilities. But this is a circular argument and takes us no further forward.
 
Clayman said:
Why didn't you feel this way the day after True Gambler released his results?

Because I know them a bit, and trust their integrity impliciltly since they have no alternative agenda or otherwise malicious motivation. Of course, my attitude was unprofessional and I wouldn't repeat it. 20/20 hindsight and all that. I don't trust PWC one iota, and in light of the various incidents of auditor malpractice, that's a pretty fair stance.

To say it's a leap of faith to play blackjack in Nevada and therefore online play should not be subject to different requirements is really going it some. In this country, a deck must be fanned out for public inspection prior to play. I'm pretty sure it's the same over there. That a card may be "dropped" unnoticed, or that the deck is fixed between inspection and placing in the shoe is really not credible. But cheating online happens TODAY - it's been proved several times. To say that the two situations are comparable is not justifiable.

If the data and the collection processes were publically available it would be a GARGANTUAN step towards 100% assuredly authentic reporting. There would be no "leap of faith" - much as there isn't playing Nevada blackjack - above comments notwithstanding. THEN the two situations would be comparable.

Jetset, you got that contact Email for them, or should I pick one at random from the site?
 
Use info@ecogra.org Caruso, although I think you are now fudging this issue in an attempt to find an easier way than actually mustering support for your views.

I do not think a communication without evidence of solid and significant support is going to cut it, as I said in my post above. That will call for some commitment and effort beyond drafting a letter or making message board posts. Well worth it, though imo.

I repeat:

However, I think you need a little more organisation of effort than simply making ad hoc nominations on a single message board if you are to have credibility.

There are hundreds of players (and I include all genuinely concerned and interested posters in that) on the leading message boards, and if you can organise yourselves so as to marshal a strong representation from this audience, an open dialogue with eCOGRA may be the most powerful and constructive thing you have done thus far....and have the best chance for success.

It may require Grandmaster, Eek, Cipher, DaveR, DirkD or one of Caruso's other supporters to work those boards from which Caruso is excluded but that should not present too great a problem.

IMO, this is not a promising way to kickstart an initiative that shows eCOGRA you speak for a significant number of people who share your views to the extent that they should consider an approach more in line with your thinking.

This could entail expense and a significant policy shift from their obvious present comfort level with the professional integrity and honesty of a major third party service provider, and the level of support for your suggestions would definitely be a consideration.

We all have busy lives, but many people in this industry make space for voluntary causes in which they strongly believe.

Your personal views and position are well established, but in the present impasse I am suggesting the more constructive course of you and your supporters taking the time and trouble to assess public opinion on eCOGRA and then act on it.

If this public opinion conforms to your views then taking the issue to a more productive level than hostile message board posts would be a valuable move forward.

I think I am going to let your comments on PwC vs Truegambler in terms of integrity and agenda, and the validity of a condemnation based on information on which we have no detail yet pass in the interests of focus here!
 
Fudging? I don't recall offering, or accepting, the role of General Secretary of the Squeeze Ecogra's Nuts committee which has been graciously, if, I might add, possibly a tad ironically:), bestowed upon me. I pursue things my own way. If others prefer other ways, may they go ahead; it won't be me, for the forseeable future.

Something like this would never have "majority" support, because the "majority" can't even find their way to a message board, let alone interest themselves in and absorb matters pertaining to regulation and the ifs and buts thereof. Those of like views represent an extreme minority. I challenge anyone to deny that it's a quality minority, however, compromising experienced, intelligent people - obviously rare amongst gamblers.

However, I WILL go ahead as I've suggested.
 
This going 'round and 'round, searching for and demanding absolute perfection reminds me of a quote by George F. Will:

The pursuit of perfection often impedes improvement. ;)
 
caruso said:
Fudging? I don't recall offering, or accepting, the role of General Secretary of the Squeeze Ecogra's Nuts committee which has been graciously, if, I might add, possibly a tad ironically:), bestowed upon me. I pursue things my own way. If others prefer other ways, may they go ahead; it won't be me, for the forseeable future.

Something like this would never have "majority" support, because the "majority" can't even find their way to a message board, let alone interest themselves in and absorb matters pertaining to regulation and the ifs and buts thereof. Those of like views represent an extreme minority. I challenge anyone to deny that it's a quality minority, however, compromising experienced, intelligent people - obviously rare amongst gamblers.

However, I WILL go ahead as I've suggested.

OK, so we've established that:

Caruso doesn't like eCOGRA because he's unhappy with the software verification. He can't say that it is right or wrong due to PwC's lack of transparency, but he does feel that the present eCOGRA Seal holders offer a fair game.

His way of expressing this personal opinion is to post on the message boards that accept him. He intends to do this every time the eCOGRA name appears, even where he has nothing new to add.

He isn't prepared to do anything more than that, although he did offer to draft a letter to eCOGRA.

He doesn't feel that regulation is necessary.

He thinks the OCA is conditionally the best way to test software.

He feels that any attempt to assess and muster public support for a persuasive and organised submission of his objections to eCOGRA is not an option because, "Something like this would never have "majority" support, because the "majority" can't even find their way to a message board, let alone interest themselves in and absorb matters pertaining to regulation and the ifs and buts thereof."

He names those whose supportive views he respects, "Those of like views represent an extreme minority. I challenge anyone to deny that it's a quality minority, however, compromising experienced, intelligent people - obviously rare amongst gamblers."

I guess that's the end of this exchange, then - very positive as usual, Caruso. Not.
 
There's an awful lot in there which is misleading and incorrect:

"Caruso doesn't like eCOGRA because he's unhappy with the software verification. He can't say that it is right or wrong due to PwC's lack of transparency."

That is an ABSOLUTE misrepresentation and you know it very well at this point. What I may judge "right" or "wrong" is irrelevant because the lack of transparancy ITSELF is what invalidates the excercise and prevents the judgement. It is NOT that the L.O.T causes a failure to form an opinion. The L.O.T invalidates it. It is neither "right" nor "wrong". It is invalid.

"...but he does feel that the present eCOGRA Seal holders offer a fair game."

Irrelevant. My data proves nothing.

"He doesn't feel that regulation is necessary."

You should have been a politician - you misquote, and out of context. Point me to ANY remark I have made to say that regulation is GENERALLY unnecessary. The comment you are referring to contains a HUGE caveat. Can you correct your error before I point it out?

"He thinks the OCA is conditionally the best way to test software."

That much is correct, although a more accurate representation would be to say that the only VALID regulation of this kind is that which is independent from any compromise, independently collected and open for inspection. The OCA data was collected without Microgaming's knowledge (the first year or so), from actual players, some of whom have identified themselves publically as I recall. That's why I favour the OCA model - but the principle, not necessarily that ACTUAL model.

Simply because you don't agree with me doesn't make my contribution "not positive". The concerns have been publically aired and Ecogra - via yourself - has been challenged. We know now also that PWC have refused to publicise any aspect of the process or the data. That some players will now probably view in a more realistic light the software verification claim, based on the facts and opinions expressed, is to me a very positive move forward. That some players will NOT buy the hype and remain correctly cautious and sceptical, is positive. Calling to task regulation and pseudo-regulation is positive. If it weren't for the message boards, to this day I'd still be inspecting RTG sites to discover who is Gold certified and who is Platinum certified Safebet (LOL, I used to do that), and I might EVEN be taking Mike Craig's OPA stamp to actually mean something. That I do so no longer is very positive - for me and my wallet; not for Safebet's nor Craig's.
 
All I see is backpedalling, Caruso at the idea that you might actually need to do something beyond making repetitive postings if you want to bring about positive change for the benefit of players.

"Misquoted and out of context" - the standard political defence. What did you say about regulation that contains this huge caveat?

"I'm personally happy as things are." That's how you started out. Personally you see no need for regulation.

But then we have the OCA commercial: "And of course, my own preference is for a player-orientated, independent of ANY compromise type organization such as the OCA project. THAT is pure regulation."

And I suspect the real reason for your attacks on eCOGRA, which is independently governed and independently tested on player transactions.

But you then equivocate with "I acknowledge SERIOUS teething problems and the huge credibility dent it (OCA) took over the MG figures," Not a big deal - all it did was trigger people like yourself to vociferously attack respectable companies like CON and Microgaming on flawed information.

Yet despite this and the other now well known funding and validation problems with OCA and the unlikelyhood of it being seriously accepted as things stand at present you still see it as "....but in terms of real "regulation", that is the way forward."

And you therefore try to pull down an existing organisation like eCOGRA that is better equipped, structured and funded to undertake a more comprehensive task.

But hold on, then you say, "At the same time, I have no problem with "player-friendly regulation as a necessary move forward in this industry", as you asked. It doesn't much concern ME, but players come in all shapes and sizes and there have to be benefits."

Can we finally assume that in your personal opinion regulation is unnecessary, but that there might be some validity in contrary opinions on that?

Then you start dancing around the lack of PwC transparency which in your personal opinion invalidates the entire eCOGRA initiative and the benefits it offers to players. Your latest statement is a model of hand-waving and does not change the fact that your opposition to eCOGRA is focused on the third party software verification and your opinion (and that of the supporters you name) on it's transparency. And indeed you are definitely not in a position to say whether the TGTR does what PwC claims for it or not.

Then again you are of the personal opinion that Microgaming casinos offer a fair game anyway....but that doesn't really suit your argument. It's irrelevant, because you now say that your data proves nothing. So we're running on personal opinion again.

Let's look at another of your statements: "The OCA data was collected without Microgaming's knowledge (the first year or so), from actual players, some of whom have identified themselves publically as I recall. That's why I favour the OCA model - but the principle, not necessarily that ACTUAL model."

OK - so now it's not the OCA you favour but something unspecific that's like it but not currently available or identified?

And with a monitored regulatory regime does it matter whether the software provider knows it is being monitored or not? The eCOGRA concept of regulation is to provide players with the protection of continuously and independently monitored software, and the fact of enforced monitoring is in itself an incentive for continued compliance. So we have the OCA (or something like it) player input, and we have the TGTR which analyses every single player transaction at eCOGRA casinos.

The rest of your post seems to me to be an attempt to dress up your continued negative attacks on eCOGRA as positive moves forward, which of course they are not. They are personal opinions repeatedly made in an attempt to discredit eCOGRA and focused on yours and your supporters' view on it's outsourced professional services.

Your continued use of the word "hype" to describe factual descriptions of eCOGRA attributes is another indication of your bias.

You are attempting to influence player opinion against eCOGRA by your posts and that is about as far as your personal commitment to redressing the faults you perceive to exist apparently goes.

IMO, you are not interested in seeing what level of support your opposition to eCOGRA has, or in mobilising it in order to establish a useful dialogue with that organisation or with PwC aimed at addressing your objections in a reasonable manner.

We are therefore left with these sort of polarised exchanges and the fruitless prospect of a reprise of your views whenever eCOGRA announces a move forward.
 
Positive change for the benefit of players is open to interpretation - you will inevitably see either myself or anyone else you regard as pissing on your patch as negative. I repeat, if gamblers can be be kept informed of your organizations shortcomings in terms of their transparancy and accoutability, in my opinion this is very positive. You regard it as negatve. Let others judge. And by others I mean the players, not the affiliates or the industry spokesmen.

Regarding regulation and your clearly intentional misrepresentation on my stance (intentional because I know what a wily old bird you are - no way are you capable of such a gross misunderstanding) this is what I originally said: At the same time, I have no problem with player-friendly regulation as a necessary move forward in this industry, as you asked. It doesn't much concern ME, but players come in all shapes and sizes and there have to be benefits. you quote this yourself further down. Translation: it doesnt concern me, as an informed player who knows the ropes, but it does others. If you cannot distinguish between my own need for regulation and that of the gambling public, generally further down the evolutionary chain and in need of nannying, I leave you to yourconfusion.

Regarding OCA / Ecogra-PWC: there is no choice here. The OCA data was found to be incorrect. THE PWC data has not been found to be anything, because to all intents and purposes it does not exist! Neither situation is of much use to anybody invalid or non-existent. However, the transparancy of the OCA type of model whether that particular operation or another based on the same principles is the basis for genuine regulation, because GIVEN validated data (and this would always be open to corroboration, as weve seen) then you have a situation which fulfils the necessary criteria: no financial compromise and transparancy in all aspects. Ecogra-PWC does not fulfil ANY criterion for acceptable regulation with regard to the software verification. Hence the preference. If this is still not clear to you, Ill try to explain again next time.

Again you repeat this irrelevant remark: And indeed you are definitely not in a position to say whether the TGTR does what PwC claims for it or not. Correct, I am not. Why? Because everything is cloaked in secrecy to the extent that, to all intents and purposes, it can reasonably be assumed that there is NO data and NO process. Is this in PWCs favour? Is the fact that opinions cannot be formed because there is nothing more tangible than quite possibly fictional statements and rubber stamps for us to look at a good thing? Ill be able to form an opinion when they give us some evidence. Since they will NEVER give us any evidence most likely because there IS no evidence I will not be able to judge the process. And you consider this in their favour? LOL, I put you in a majority of one on that one. Breaking News!!! Its official!!! Ecogra-PWC cannot be judged to be either good or bad, because the facts required for judgement to be formed are HIDDEN FROM PUBLIC VIEW! They will NOT TELL YOU ANYTHING! Long Live Ecogra-PWC, the gods of honest software regulation!!

Did I say LOL?

We are therefore left with these sort of polarised exchanges and the fruitless prospect of a reprise of your views whenever eCOGRA announces a move forward.

Fruitless? If I present just ONE gambler with the facts from a rational perspective, I serve a useful purpose.
 
QUOTE "Positive change for the benefit of players" is open to interpretation - you will inevitably see either myself or anyone else you regard as pissing on your patch as negative. I repeat, if gamblers can be be kept informed of your organization's shortcomings in terms of their transparancy and accoutability, in my opinion this is very positive. You regard it as "negatve". Let others judge. And by "others" I mean the players, not the affiliates or the industry spokesmen."UNQUOTE

Nope - not "my" organisation or "my patch" - eCOGRA is independently governed and professionally managed beyond my control, but unlike yourself I certainly believe in the need for real regulation with the better player protection that flows from it and that this initiative offers.

You say "let others judge" and again attempt to fragment opinions into players and those you seem to view as having no useful contribution to make such as "affiliates or industry insiders". This is regardless of the fact that many of these may additionally be players and/or have proved to have a sincere desire to see that players are respected. IMO that sort of blinkered, polarised approach is not going to assist anyone as we try and find a better way forward.

However - back to your "let others judge" observation, I believe that is all eCOGRA expects - that it will stand or fall on the performance delivered by its Seal bearers. That benefits players in my book because these are operations where player-sensitive regulations are enforced.

QUOTE Regarding regulation and your clearly intentional misrepresentation on my stance ("intentional" because I know what a wily old bird you are - no way are you capable of such a gross misunderstanding) - this is what I originally said: "At the same time, I have no problem with player-friendly regulation as a necessary move forward in this industry, as you asked. It doesn't much concern ME, but players come in all shapes and sizes and there have to be benefits." - you quote this yourself further down. Translation: it doesn't concern me, as an informed player who knows the ropes, but it does others. If you cannot distinguish between my own need for regulation and that of the gambling public, generally further down the evolutionary chain and in need of nannying, I leave you to your."confusion".UNQUOTE

Again, I don't see that as a misrepresentation at all. I note that you have ommitted the following from your latest quote, and that is revealing - but you actually posted "I'm personally happy as things are." That's how you started out, followed by some equivocation. Personally you see no need for regulation.

No matter how you dance around it, you personally do not see the need for regulation and are happy with the status quo. That goes to your attitude in this debate. We were discussing your personal opinions. Please have the integrity to stay with your comments or withdraw them.

However, let us agree that you do accept that despite your personal lack of the need for protection, most other players may be at a different level or have a conflicting opinion. I have to say, I find your rather patronising "...gambling public, generally further down the evolutionary chain and in need of nannying," attitude surprising to say the least.

I believe the message boards and private emails to mediators show daily that there are way too many clip joints out there. Consequently there is a need for regulation, and to distinguish casinos that are making a practical and honest effort to deliver enforced professional and trouble free service to players. As opposed to those that engage in no pays and slow pays, unfair bonus treatment and the other evils that we see in the daily parade. eCOGRA regulations are framed in such practical way and are conscientiously applied, which does that.


QUOTE Regarding OCA / Ecogra-PWC: there is no choice here. The OCA data was found to be incorrect. THE PWC data has not been found to be anything, because to all intents and purposes it does not exist! Neither situation is of much use to anybody - invalid or non-existent. However, the transparancy of the OCA type of model - whether that particular operation or another based on the same principles - is the basis for genuine regulation, because GIVEN validated data (and this would always be open to corroboration, as we've seen) then you have a situation which fulfils the necessary criteria: no financial compromise and transparancy in all aspects. Ecogra-PWC does not fulfil ANY criterion for acceptable regulation with regard to the software verification. Hence the preference. If this is still not clear to you, I'll try to explain again next time.UNQUOTE

You're going around the bushes again with this OCA thing, without offering a viable alternative. If you are now saying that OCA is not regarded as a viable alternative, why keep inserting it into the debate?

You say "However, the transparancy of the OCA type of model - whether that particular operation or another based on the same principles - is the basis for genuine regulation, because GIVEN validated data..." but there is as far as I can see no validation or conclusions beyond the publication of the stats....and you are proposing "what-ifs" models and not systems that are available for use and in existance. There is no other de facto system being presented by you here.

I am open to correction, but I cannot recall Truegambler providing the inner workings of his proprietary OCA analytical process that you seem to be requiring from PwC, and you should ask him for his views on the expense of validation btw, which has not been done on the OCA as far as I am aware.

Are you suggesting that the monthly publication of massive amounts of statistical data by PwC a la OCA would constitute verification for you?

It seems to me that you would rather see no attempt at regulation at all than a fully structured one like eCOGRA where you have a problem with the disclosure of third party proprietary testing procedures, even though you personally feel that the softwares being deployed by eCOGRA casinos are fair.

I haven't yet seen any objections from you to the claims made by some major casinos and licensing jurisdictions that specified softwares are tested by traditional testing laboratories, and this may be a useful area to explore in the present stalemate.

Assuming that the testing laboratory concerned has a respectable reputation, what amount of disclosure on the testing techniques and software used would you regard as acceptable, and what level of independent technical/professional capability would you deem necessary to make the judgement that the tests were competent and relevant?

Who would you suggest makes such an evaluation? Would this constitute sufficient validation in your opinion?

QUOTE Because everything is cloaked in secrecy to the extent that, to all intents and purposes, it can reasonably be assumed that there is NO data and NO process. Is this in PWC's favour? Is the fact that opinions cannot be formed because there is nothing more tangible than quite possibly fictional statements and rubber stamps for us to look at a good thing? I'll be able to "form an opinion" when they give us some evidence. Since they will NEVER give us any evidence - most likely because there IS no evidence - I will not be able to judge the process. UNQUOTE

I would suggest that you clearly have made assumptions and formed an opinion that insists that PwC and everything associated with it in this debate is up to no good.

No data and no process? Do you seriously believe that a member of the Big 8 international financial services companies would be a malice aforethought party to this? That they would run the legal and reputation risk of "rubber stamping" and making "fictional statements" on results from their third party clientele?

Or is there the possibility that they will not open up their independent system to the sort of inspection you appear to be demanding because it is developed in-house at considerable expense and effort by appropriate professionals and has a commercial proprietary value as a consquence?. I realise that you and you supporters will not accept that possibility, but imo it is far more likely than the ridiculous allegations you are making here about PwC's and for that matter eCOGRA's integrity...and please spare me the usual Enron and corruption retorts.

QUOTE Fruitless? If I present just ONE gambler with the facts from a rational perspective, I serve a useful purpose.UNQUOTE

I think the operative word here is probably "rational" when it comes to a personal perspective, and I don't personally see a lot of that here, Caruso. What I do see is a strong personal antipathy carried to extreme lengths, which unfortunately is blinding you to the great potential of eCOGRA and the improvement it brings to the industry .
 
Your association with Ecogra-PWC evidently goes some way beyond "I certainly believe in the need for real regulation"; you're their front-man, their spokesman, their reporter, their tireless apologist. You're clearly DEEPLY involved with these folk.

For the last time, these are my expressed opinions (here) on regulation: "I'm personally happy as things are" and "I have no problem with player-friendly regulation as a necessary move forward in this industry, as you asked. It doesn't much concern ME, but players come in all shapes and sizes and there have to be benefits." A blind man in a fog can ascertain from this that I am happy as things are for myself, but I appreciate that the need is there for others. It isn't important to me that you fake misunderstanding of this. My opinion is as I've stated, it's clearly expressed and any reasonable reader can see that for themselves. Those sitting in the Ecogra-PWC pocket I do not qualify as "reasonable", so you can carry on inventing misinterpretations as you like.

I have also clearly expressed what I regard as valid regulation, transparent in all matters and uncompromised (the "uncompromised" aspect is not so relevant given total transparancy, as I see it) - none of which can be claimed by Ecogra-PWC. The OCA model, which fulfilled the criteria of no compromise and transparent data (although more details on the collection process would have been needed, as was stated at the time, and no doubt those requisite details would have been published if it had been necessary, ie. if the data had not been found to be error-ridden, thus invalidating the exercise) satisfies the criteria. I have no projects of my own and no influence with the OCA, and neither is it my job to offer alternatives. That I do not have my own software regulator to offer in place of PWC does not in any way invalidate the fact that the PWC model is meaningless - it has no relevance to the matter.

"Are you suggesting that the monthly publication of massive amounts of statistical data by PwC a la OCA would constitute verification for you?"

It would certainly be a large part of it.

"I haven't yet seen any objections from you to the claims made by some major casinos and licensing jurisdictions that specified softwares are tested by traditional testing laboratories"

LOL, I know nothing about that. It remains equally meaningless, for the same reasons.

"It seems to me that you would rather see no attempt at regulation at all than a fully structured one like eCOGRA ."

Nothing at all rather than bogus offerings. Ecogra is "bogus" in the software aspect only, so they are certainly better than nothing, and they offer a handy, if unlikely to be over-used, dispute service.

Regarding all your questions about the actual details beyond the simple fact of "transpancy", I've already made comments here or at WOL about that. I don't want to repeat it all now, but I'll include it in the letter I hope to get around to writing soon to your folk on this matter.

In a nutshell, I wish everybody would drop any claim, or intention, or hope to regulate software. Regulate everything else, please. Get the likes of crooks like Cloud, Friedmann etc out of the picture once an for all by establishing a valid body that will never accept them, thus consigning them to the slag heap. Just ditch these bogus software attempts. They're (sorry, have to say it again) meaningless and they just get in the way. As somebody said, you believe it or you don't. If you believe the game is fair, play it. If you don't, either stay away or be a sucker and play a rigged game. But these things are best left I think to the players to decide for themselves, as providing authenticateable verification seems to me currently prohibitatively difficult.

Anyway, that's all I have to say on this matter for the time being.
 

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