
This Sunday evening CBS will present their special program “How Online Gamblers Unmasked Cheaters”. This investigation special was filmed after a 4 month research into the online poker industry and purposely a scam with the online poker website Absolute Poker.
This Texas Hold’em poker website was examined after a few of the poker players on the webpage alleged that a player was dishonestly winning a large amount of poker hands. Todd Witteles was a key player in this examination, according to Witteles; he was losing large amounts of money to the exact same Texas Hold’em player. Witteles claimed that this gambler was raising against incredibly good poker hands, the majority of people would have presumed he was simply giving his money to the other players, but he was in reality winning quite often.
Witteles was in the right with his assumptions, following this it was discovered that a person possibly working for the company was able to spy on anyone’s hole cards. With the first look, Absolute Poker claimed that there were no faults with the page or the Texas Hold’em poker player. After several players stepped up with claims, the Texas Hold’em site looked deeper into the problem and found the problem.
By January of 2008, the KGC exposed what the poker competitors and the Texas Hold’em poker website had assumed all along. It turned out that, there was an employee who had hacked the Texas Hold’em page’s security and was playing poker illegitimately for around a month and a half. The investigation verified that the poker website had not benefited from the illicit transactions whatsoever, and was in no way, shape or form involved.
These circumstances are further confirmation that there ought to be more rules in regards to gambling websites. The United States government should license and regulate the internet Texas Hold’em poker business to look after these honest clients. These guidelines would also police the access to these websites by kids, which is turning into another issue lately.
