I seem to get a lot of spam from casinos and sportsbooks that iam already a member of,with welcome bonuses ane encouraging me to join! I guess this proves the point that the people sending spam and the casinos dont really have any communication with each other. Theres probably some sort of middle company raking in all the affiliate money from this.
On another note I did get the free £50 so it was genuine. But one deposit and iam put off already! Not because of there games but the fact I only ever deposit by debit card or paypal(if available) at casinos. The first deposit went through ok then the second failed to process "due to my bank",and i should "try moneybookers"! I dont wanna be forced into using an e-wallet,if it says cards accepted it shouldn't mean for only one deposit per day! This is not the only casino that does this.
This happens because casinos don't use the new "verified by VISA" or "Mastercard securecode". UK banks now EXPECT legitimate online merchants to be using this to guard against fraud. Chip & Pin throughout the UK has seen a significant shift to fraudsters exploiting weaknesses in eCommerce in order to circumvent the extra security. These two schemes are the online equivalent of Chip & Pin, and so it is possible that the repeat nature of the transaction tripped your bank into blocking the second transaction. This may then be followed by a phonecall from your bank confirming that you made that attempt, and they will then lift the block on that merchant.
If you use First Direct, DON'T. My experience is that their system is the most "trigger happy" I have known, blocking around 50% of my deposits for no obvious reason, even though I repeatedly confirmed they were genuine with that merchant.
Barclaycard is the best, and I have not had any transactions, no matter how many in a day, being blocked. I don't play at casinos in the Rogue pit, so I can't say whether this means they are too lax with their systems. A few casinos (32 Red is one) use "Verified by VISA", so here at least you should not run into such problems.
Casinos are not saying "try Moneybookers" for YOUR benefit, it is because they can't get your money if you simply wait and sort it out with your bank every time it happens.
Of course, Ladbrokes casino HATES you to use Moneybookers, and a few others will negatively discriminate against you by doubling your WR or more. It seems that if you use Moneybookers and Neteller, it flags you as an "experienced player", which a few casinos consider the same thing as "bonus abuser", which leads to you getting second class treatment.
Another problem with eWallets is that the money stored there is NOT as safe as with the banks. eWallets may have to ring fence client funds, but if a bank goes bust, the government steps in to cover retail deposits. This is NOT the case with eWallets, where if something goes wrong with the ring fencing arrangements, and client funds disappear, there is NO compensation from the government, and customers queue up with other creditors for so many pence in the pound.
Quite a few eWallets serving the US market have "walked" with players money for various reasons, and even though laws there are different, the governments of the jurisdictions licensing those eWallets did NOT step in to ensure customers got their money back. Although non-US facing eWallets don't face the same risks (DoJ seizures etc), NO private business is immune to the unexpected disaster. Lodging money with an eWallet is similar to paying in to a private savings scheme that is NOT regulated as a bank. Remember Farepack, where customers paid into a "savings account" all year in order to receive a Christmas hamper or shopping vouchers. They were supposed to ring fence that money so that it would be safe, but when disaster struck, the money was gone, even the "safe" ringfenced money. The financial compansation scheme did NOT apply, because like Moneybookers, Fareback was NOT a bank, just a private company.
If you look closely at the details, you will find you do NOT "deposit" money with Moneybookers or Neteller. What happens is that you EXCHANGE your "real" money for "electronic money" in the same way you might exchange cash for gaming chips at the casino. If the casino goes bust before you have exchanged thiose chips back, or doesn't have the money in "float" to cover the chips you won, you find yourself stuck with worthless bits of plastic that are no use other than in the casino, whereas money can be used elsewhere if one business decides not to take it.
Using an eWallet means accepting that the small risk of them being unable to exchange your eMoney back to real money on demand is outweighed by the convenience of keeping your gambling money in "chip form" as you go from casino to casino, rather than repeatedly converting it to and fro, which can take up to a week for the process of moving from eMoney back to money in the bank.
"big dan" makes his money by taking a percentage of what you deposit and lose at the casino. You may be shocked to know that "big dan" could easily make 20% to 30% on what you lose each month - quite an incentive to spam if he gets away with it. Having signed up through that soam for your free money, every deposit that goes through and is lost nets "big dan" about a quarter of the value.
He has now made about a quarter of that first deposit that went through, but your bank has saved you from donating again (and of course rewarding him for spamming you).
If you get a spam, but are interested in that casino anyway, but resent being spammed, go direct - don't reward the spammer by clicking through his link.
If you liked the promise, see if you can get the same deal direct by quoting it to CS, and if they say you are "not on the list", say "Fine, I will look elsewhere". You may well find you "are on the list after all" after a "manager" has been consulted