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Reason #1 why the Wizard likes Bodog:
Excellent customer support
The thing that separates Bodog from the rest is its customer support. Many other online gaming companies outsource their support. It can be difficult getting a response from them, and if you do it is often slow and handled by somebody with little understanding of gambling or even of English. But Bodog's support is handled by Bodog, and their support staff is actually knowledgeable and helpful.
I'm so confident that you'll have a good experience with Bodog that if you have a problem getting paid and you can't resolve it with them on your own, I'll talk to them myself. I personally have known the Bodog management for about three years and always found them to be professional, friendly, and knowledgeable. I have also personally visited one of their call centers so I could see first-hand how they handle customer issues. (More on my mediation service.)
If you have a problem with any other casino besides Bodog, I can't help you. I get complaints from players of other online casinos every day who have difficulty getting paid. However that isn't my job nor my problem. If you play at Bodog after clicking through my site I'll stand behind you 100%. Any place else and you're on your own. (Visit Bodog)
Try blackjack at Bodog. One click and you're in:
 No popups, no download, no registration, no B.S., just the game.
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From
the Wizard....
Absolute
Poker Scandal
Much of my attention in October was
devoted to the Absolute Poker cheating
scandal. In late September I became
aware of a flurry of accusations on the poker
bulletin boards that some players had "Super
User" accounts which enabled them to see the
hole cards of their opponents. I had
access to some log files, and could indeed see
that a certain player by the handle of POTRIPPER
was doing very well. However, the evidence
did not yet convince me beyond a reasonable
doubt.
Then the "bloody glove" hit the
web. One of the accusers, who went by
the handle CRAZYMARCO, surprisingly received
from Absolute Poker a transcript of a tournament
that indicated all kinds of confidential
information, including all players' hole cards,
and the IP and e-mail addresses of all players
and lurkers. Prior to this, Absolute Poker
vehemently denied it was possible for any player
to have knowledge of opponent hole cards.
However it was blatantly obvious following the
playback of the tournament that POTRIPPER had
exactly that, and was milking it for all it was
worth.
On October 18 I
posted an analysis of the
transcript. The day following my
posting, Absolute Poker confessed that indeed
some players could see all opponent hole
cards. They said it was an inside job, and
the consultant behind it was immediately
fired.
For more details, please see my Absolute
Poker Investigation. At the bottom I
indicate other good sources on the story. For
now, public confidence in both Absolute Poker,
and online poker in general, is significantly
shaken.
Ron
Paul: Presidental candidate would legalize online
gambling
You might be wondering how the
presidential candidates feel about online
gambling, especially in light of the
regulations passed last year which made things
more difficult. I know of only two
candidates of have taken a stand on the issue,
one in favor, and one against.
Texas Congressman Ron
Paul believes that people should be
able to freely gamble online. He was one of
the few to take a stand against H.R. 4411,
the Internet
Gambling Prohibition Act.
On the other side, Former Arkansas
governor Mike Huckabee opposes online
gambling. He stated in a questionnaire that
as president he would veto any bill to reverse
the new restrictions on online gambling.
I have more
information on my site.
This is not meant to be an official
endorsement of Ron Paul, but just information
for readers who care about this issue.
My
football betting
My main source of gambling income is
sports
betting, and that comes entirely from
football. However this has been a rough
season. Between college and the NFL I'm up only
1.95%. This is much less than my perceived
expectation, and results from previous years.
Combining this small win with my loss on
video
poker and table game tounaments this year,
it's possible that I'll show a net loss for
2007. Even if that happens I will likely still
be ahead overall because of successful previous
years, but I prefer to win ever year anyway.
Last year I boasted about my good fortune
gambling. I'm not the type of gambler who only
brags about winnings and says nothing about
losing, so there you have it.
Home
Robbery
My home was broken into on November
20th during the day, while I was on vacation in
Death
Valley. The culprits broke a
window next to the door, reached inside, and
opened the door.
Inside we found most the drawers opened, and
items they didn't want all over the floor. There
was no malicious damage. They were rather picky
and only took my Bose CD player, about $1000 in
jewelry, and about $600 in cash. Left untouched
were five computers and thousands of dollars in
antique license
plates. I think the place has been cased for
a while. I often saw people sitting in parked
cars for long periods of time, or driving around
the neighborhood slowly. My neighbor reports
that on the day of the incident a woman was
sitting in her car near our house for a long
time. I think that it was not a coincidence they
hit us while I wasn't at home. Normally I ride
my bicycle back and forth between the two homes
several times a day. The one time I'm nowhere to
be seen, I get hit.
The LVPD did a crime scene
investigation. First they sent a cadet who
filled out a report, and then a investigator who
took lots of pictures and dusted for
fingerprints. Next, everything will get passed
up to detective. The thieves did their homework
about when to hit us and were not overly greedy.
I would suspect they wore gloves and will
probably hawk our stuff outside of Vegas. If I
were to set a line, I'd say the probability of
an arrest being made is about 10%, at best.
In addition to this, in the last year we've
had two bicycles and a child's scooter stolen,
on three separate incidents. This, combined with
other factors like bad schools and an apathetic
community, makes me consider leaving Las Vegas.
With the housing market what it is, we're pretty
much stuck here until homes start selling again.
Still, we probably will stay anyway. However an
alarm system is probably a short-term solution,
and moving to a better neighborhood a long-term
plan.
Ask
the Wizard!
Here's an excerpt from the newest
Ask
the Wizard, column
#198.
Do you have any
opinions about presidential futures? I.e.,
betting on which candidate will win his/her
primary or the general election? Is there any
way of calculating the house edge? Would you
ever consider making such wagers for real money?
Personally, I think that watching the current
betting lines may be better than polls to
predict election results. Do you think there's
any validity to them? -- Gary
Yes, I do indeed bet on elections.
In 1996 I made my biggest bet to date on
Clinton over Dole at even money. That was
also one of the best bets I ever made. I have
been betting every election ever since, most
of the time against friends. At major online
sites that take political bets, I think it is
a close to efficient market. In other words,
I think the market is basically right, and
the odds can be used to estimate the
probability of each candidate winning.
Currently I think that TradeSports is a good
source for election odds. As I write this, on
November 22, the odds given equate to the
following probabilities of victory. I get
these by taking an average between the buy
and sell prices.
|
Republican
Primary
|
|
Candidate
|
Probability
|
|
Giuliani
|
45.5%
|
|
Thompson
|
5.1%
|
|
Romney
|
27.1%
|
|
Huckabee
|
8.2%
|
|
Paul
|
6.0%
|
|
McCain
|
7.2%
|
|
Other
|
0.9%
|
|
|
Democratic
Primary
|
|
Candidate
|
Probability
|
|
Clinton
|
71.7%
|
|
Obama
|
18.0%
|
|
Gore
|
4.6%
|
|
Edwards
|
5.4%
|
|
Other
|
0.3%
|
|
|
Party
to Win
|
|
Party
|
Probability
|
|
Democrat
|
63.6%
|
|
Republican
|
34.9%
|
|
Other
|
1.5%
|
|
You can use my
article on sports futures to calculate
the overall house edge of any type of futures
bet. For politics, my hunch is that betting
on the favorites is probably the better way
to go, in general. For example, I would be
happy to buy a contract on Hillary Clinton if
I had an account at TradeSports. Just my two
cents.
What's
new on the site
From
Michael Bluejay....
Bodog
on the presidential election
Bodog
is taking bets on the presidential election,
too. Stephen Colbert started as
an 800-1 longshot, and then he officially
announced his candidacy, and his odds were
slashed to 600-1. Then he actually got on the
ballot for a Republican primary, and now he's
down to a "mere" 225-1. Go, Colbert!
Ron Paul's odds have also been slashed as his
campaign picks up more support, going
from 25 to 1, then 17 to 1, then 12 to 1, and
now just 8/1.
Here are the lines as of November 24,
2007:
|
Republican
Primary
|
|
Candidate
|
Line
|
|
Rudy Giuliani
|
1.95
|
|
Mitt Romney
|
3.50
|
|
Fred Thompson
|
5.00
|
|
John McCain
|
6.00
|
|
Newt Gingrich
|
8.00
|
|
Ron Paul
|
9.00
|
|
Mike Huckabee
|
15.00
|
|
(many others, see
website for more)
|
|
|
Democratic
Primary
|
|
Candidate
|
Line
|
|
Hillary Clinton
|
1.17
|
|
Barack Obama
|
3.40
|
|
Al Gore
|
6.00
|
|
John Edwards
|
9.00
|
|
Dennis Kucinich
|
21.00
|
|
Joseph Biden
|
31.00
|
|
Bill Richardson
|
41.00
|
|
(many others, see
website for more)
|
|
|
Party
to Win
|
|
Party
|
Probability
|
|
Democrat
|
1.25
|
|
Republican
|
1.91
|
|
Unity08
|
61.00
|
|
Reform
|
101.00
|
|
Libertarian
|
126.00
|
|
Any other party
|
251.00
|
|
If you're paying attention, you noticed
that the numbers in my tables are in a different
format than those in the Wizard's table.
What gives? The answer is that odds can be
expressed in four different ways:
- American (e.g., -588, +240)
- Decimal (e.g., 1.17, 3.40)
- Fractional (e.g., 1/6, 12/5)
- Percentage (e.g., 85.5%, 29.4%)
Each example above are the odds for
Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama at Bodog.
Different methods, same values. Bodog lets you
choose your favorite way of showing the odds
(American, Decimal, or Fractional), and I chose
Decimal. Here's a
calculator that will convert between the
first three formats.
Me, I just joined the brand-new
Unity08
Party. I'm skeptical of third
parties, but I like the idea behind this one:
The members choose what issues are most
important to them online, and the convention is
actually held online, with the candidates being
chosen online. Armchair politics! I love it.
Other
stuff you can bet on
Politics is not your cup of tea?
No problem. At Bodog you can also bet on:
...and a bunch of other stuff. Bodog was also
taking bets on when the price of oil would hit
$100 a gallon, but they recently closed off
betting on that item.
You might remember from a previous
newsletter that I
bet $50 that Congress wouldn't override a
presidential veto in 2007. My reasoning was
that I'd bet against my preferred
outcome, so that I'd be a winner either way. If
congress overrode the president, I'd lose my
bet, but Whoo-hoo! Congress overrode the
president! Yee-ha! And if congress failed to
override the president, my consolation prize
would be some money in my pocket from the bet
that I made.
So did I win? Of course I did. Like I
said, I couldn't lose. Congress
overrode the president on a water projects
bill on November 8, by a stunning margin: 79 to
14. Even most Republicans voted to override the
veto, showing just how badly out of step the
President is. (And that was why I was
comfortable knowing that I preferred a veto
override before I even knew what the issues
would be.)
It's kind of like this: If I could
spend $50 to make a presidential veto happen,
would I? Sure! $50 well spent.
The Bodog site does have one problem,
though: The Bet History goes back only 14
days. So there's no way for me to see this (or
any other) bet that I placed back in May. I can
see where that bet was resolved, but it's not
obvious: Manage Account >> eCash
Statement. (Huh?) And even that only works for
bets resolved in the last 31 days. There's no
reason that players shouldn't be able to see
every bet they've ever placed (as well as the
outcome), and I hope Bodog will fix that
soon.
Big
poker news at Bodog
Two big things are happening at
Bodog Poker: a new poker client, and the One
Billion Hands promotion.
The new poker software has lots of
little improvements that make things cleaner,
easier, and prettier, but there are two changes
of special note. The first is that you can
choose your own table felt color and brightness
level. Usually with Internet software it's a
one-size-fits-all model, whether it really fits
or not, but the better solution is to just let
the user choose. And that's what Bodog did here,
so props to them. But the second feature I
really like: The player's who's on
action is indicated by a spotlight. Yes yes yes
yes! No more looking around for a countdown
timer, it's just nicely obvious whose turn it is
now. Even more so than in a live game.
Unfortunately, Bodog Poker still doesn't run
on Macs, and probably never will. The casino
works fine on Macs for the play-in-browser
games, and the political bets mentioned above
work fine, but poker is still a PC-only
thing.
The other big news is the Billionth
Hand promotion. All players at the table
where the billionth hand is dealt will split a
$10,000 prize. There are also other prizes for
other events as well as daily draws. Check
it out.
Bodog
ahora en Español
(This was translated from
English by the Google translator.)
Cansado de todos los Bodog noticias
en este boletín de noticias? Mala
suerte, Hay más. Bodog es ahora de
bienvenida de habla hispana Jugadores con los
brazos abiertos. Tienen una especial en
español - Idioma de atención al
cliente de número (1-866-205-3353), un
Español amistoso dirección de
correo electrónico (en lugar del
servicio@, service@ -- lindo), y
existen planes para abrir un completo Verdadero
español de los juegos ", para que los
latinos y Los españoles ya no
tendrán que leer que loca gringa Sitio
donde todas las palabras son extrañamente
carece de todos los Extraordinario de marcas
diacríticas.
(The original English
version.)
Tired of all the Bodog news in this
newsletter? Too bad, there's more. Bodog is
now welcoming Spanish-speaking players with open
arms. They've got a special Spanish-language
customer support number (1-866-205-3353), a
Spanish friendly email address (servicio@
instead of service@ -- cute), and there
are plans to open a full-fledged
Spanish-language gaming site, so that Latinos
and Spaniards will no longer have to read that
crazy gringo site where all the words are
strangely devoid of all the special diacritical
marks.
Interesting
stuff at the online gambling hearing
There were lots of interesting
moments in the hearing held by the U.S. House
Judiciary Committee on Nov. 14th about the legal
state of online gambling:
- The U.S. Attorney seemed to be unable to
make up her mind whether online gambling was
legal or not.
- An esteemed law professor said that the
U.S. is breaking international law by not
allowing online gambling.
- A professional poker player bested a
member of Congress in a battle of wits.
- The Family Research Council was outed as
actually being opposed to all forms of
gambling (even the lottery), not just online
gambling.
- There was reference to new bills filed
which would legalize online gambling
explicitly, removing any ambiguity.
Let's start with the burning question: Is
online gambling illegal or not? If you're
confused about that, you're not alone. U.S. Attorney
Catherine Hanaway doesn't seem to know either.
She gave conflicting answers on that question at
the hearing.
She started out by saying flatly that
all Internet gambling is illegal,
including not only sports but also casino games
and even poker.
(timecode
00:24) Whoa, that seems pretty clear
cut!
It wasn't long before she was forced to
reverse herself.
Rep. Robert C. Scott (D-VA) asked,
"Isn't it true that in the
federal code, it is not illegal to gamble on the
Internet, it is illegal to run a gambling
operation?"
Hanaway replied,
"It is illegal to
engage in the business of taking bets or
wagers."
Scott countered,
"But...there's no
prohibition against gambling on the
Internet?"
Hanaway:
"That's
correct."
(2:35)
Ah, so gambling online isn't against the law
after all. Right after she said it was.
Even Rep. Bob Goodlatte (R-VA), the
primary supporter of a ban on Internet gambling,
admitted that online gambling isn't
illegal:
[T]he
only thing that Congress has done is
to pass legislation related to the transfer
of funds. We have changed no laws
related to what is lawful and what is not
lawful for gambling.
(2:42)
It didn't stop there. Rep. Robert
Wexler (D-FL) said,
If [all
forms of Internet gambling are really
prohibited], why aren't we prosecuting
every lottery director in America? Why aren't
we prosecuting everybody who shows up at an
offtrack horse-betting establishment in
America? Why aren't we prosecuting every
fantasy sports outlet in America? Please tell
me, where do I have it wrong?
He asked the U.S. Attorney directly,
Has the Dept.
of Justice shut down a single e-lottery
system in the United States? And if you
haven't, why not?
Hanaway said she didn't know, but that she
could find out and follow up. She doesn't know?!
That's hard to believe.
(2:20)
You can see video
of the hearing on the House of
Representatives website, along with all the
written testimony provided by the expert
witnesses. I also have a
detailed report on the hearing with more
juicy bits over at VegasClick.com.
Free
book drawing winner
- This month's winner of the Wizard's book,
Gambling
102, is Keith -- subscriber #5859
(alphabetically) of 11,753, and who signed up
for the list way back in March 2004.
Congratulations to Keith!
Until next time, set
your expectations high.
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