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Poker scandal

#21 User is offline   Hanoi5 

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Posted 2011-September-22, 20:37

View Postaguahombre, on 2011-September-22, 20:25, said:

Well, maybe we should stick to discussing prohibition of things not so far on one end of the scale, like poker...and not try to compare it with murder.

My post stated the Probibition (U.S. Volstead Act) led to deaths; was not a value judgement about people's pleasures, but rather an opinion about government deciding what those pleasures should be.


And I was trying to convey the idea that no matter what we think there will always be people against or in favor of it. And there'll be good and bad things coming out of it, too.

And I first wanted to say that we shouldn't rely so much on the government and just try to live with the few liberties they left us. If people in the US just accepted the fact that they can't play poker legally on the internet in their country and that if they do they can lose their money then people wouldn't have lost their money. If you complain that the government should just legalize poker then they'll create a organism that will take care of it, people to manage it, secretaries, etc and then those people will get involved in some sort of corruption and suck more money from you in taxes, etc.

 wyman, on 2012-May-04, 09:48, said:

Also, he rates to not have a heart void when he leads the 3.


 rbforster, on 2012-May-20, 21:04, said:

Besides playing for fun, most people also like to play bridge to win


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#22 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2011-September-23, 07:45

Perhaps you all should read Ain't Nobody's Business If You Do, by Peter McWilliams. The book is sub-titled "The Absurdity of Prohibition in a Free Society".
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#23 User is offline   Elianna 

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Posted 2011-September-23, 14:27

I don't understand something:

Quote

In London, Sebastian Fox, an aspiring music producer, said he could earn around $1,200 a month playing poker online. He racked up $8,000 in an account on Full Tilt. On June 29, he said that he tried to withdraw around $2,400 to pay for rent and other living expenses and discovered Full Tilt's website had been closed down, following the U.S. suit and a subsequent raid by authorities in the U.K.'s Channel Islands where Full Tilt is licensed to operate its website


The way I read this, is that the U.S. shut the company down, and is now prosecuting them for not being able to operate while being shut down. What am I missing?
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#24 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2011-September-23, 14:29

View Postaguahombre, on 2011-September-22, 14:09, said:

Absent prohibitions, people emerge who ---acting in their own best interests --- improve the service provided and keep the unsavory types in line; OR people (customers or providers) emerge who demand of government that it regulate the activity.

Prohibition is just not a good idea.

Another example is abortions. Before they were legal, women got "back alley" abortions, and complications (including death) were common due to poor conditions. Legalization meant that they could be done in legitimate hospitals and clinics, and the government and medical community could set and enforce safety standards.

It simply never works to criminalize an activity that a large segment of the population really wants to do.

#25 User is offline   Stephen Tu 

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Posted 2011-September-23, 15:50

View PostElianna, on 2011-September-23, 14:27, said:

The way I read this, is that the U.S. shut the company down, and is now prosecuting them for not being able to operate while being shut down. What am I missing?


Quite a lot. The U.S. didn't shut the entire company down. What it did in April was it seized its U.S. facing domain name (blocking access to the U.S. website), and froze payments working from Full Tilt -> payment processing companies -> banks. It did this along with a couple other major poker sites, the biggest other one being Pokerstars. Both companies continued to operate their sites legally overseas, but froze real money action for all players with U.S. addresses. About a month after the U.S. shutdown, the Feds made an agreement to let the sites pay out the U.S. players' remaining balances, while litigation continues. Pokerstars promptly paid everyone back.

Full Tilt however did not. Full Tilt ran into additional trouble, it got its gaming license (issued in some other country) suspended (I forgot exactly why). Also, it came to light that Full Tilt was either grossly mismanaged, or was run by outright crooks, because they didn't keep the money in player accounts segregated from their operations, and used it to pay owners & to run things. A legitimately run site should have been be able to run operations and pay out its profit dividends solely from its enormous incoming revenue stream (the rake), while keeping player funds sacrosanct & separate. But now you have a situation where they owe players hundreds of millions, but only have a few tens of millions to pay them. This is a fraud/theft charge, and a separate legal issue from the original one filed in April, which alleged money laundering (since the payment processing companies weren't properly disclosing the destination of the funds to the banks), among other things. For the April charges, arguably no one got defrauded, since everyone got the money they were supposed to, but for these new ones, people are are being stolen from.
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#26 User is offline   Elianna 

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Posted 2011-September-23, 22:04

View PostStephen Tu, on 2011-September-23, 15:50, said:

Quite a lot. The U.S. didn't shut the entire company down. What it did in April was it seized its U.S. facing domain name (blocking access to the U.S. website), and froze payments working from Full Tilt -> payment processing companies -> banks. It did this along with a couple other major poker sites, the biggest other one being Pokerstars. Both companies continued to operate their sites legally overseas, but froze real money action for all players with U.S. addresses. About a month after the U.S. shutdown, the Feds made an agreement to let the sites pay out the U.S. players' remaining balances, while litigation continues. Pokerstars promptly paid everyone back.

Full Tilt however did not. Full Tilt ran into additional trouble, it got its gaming license (issued in some other country) suspended (I forgot exactly why). Also, it came to light that Full Tilt was either grossly mismanaged, or was run by outright crooks, because they didn't keep the money in player accounts segregated from their operations, and used it to pay owners & to run things. A legitimately run site should have been be able to run operations and pay out its profit dividends solely from its enormous incoming revenue stream (the rake), while keeping player funds sacrosanct & separate. But now you have a situation where they owe players hundreds of millions, but only have a few tens of millions to pay them. This is a fraud/theft charge, and a separate legal issue from the original one filed in April, which alleged money laundering (since the payment processing companies weren't properly disclosing the destination of the funds to the banks), among other things. For the April charges, arguably no one got defrauded, since everyone got the money they were supposed to, but for these new ones, people are are being stolen from.


Thank you. The part I found especially revealing was

Quote

About a month after the U.S. shutdown, the Feds made an agreement to let the sites pay out the U.S. players' remaining balances, while litigation continues.


That was the piece I was missing.
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#27 User is offline   aguahombre 

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Posted 2011-September-23, 22:46

View PostStephen Tu, on 2011-September-23, 15:50, said:

About a month after the U.S. shutdown, the Feds made an agreement to let the sites pay out the U.S. players' remaining balances, while litigation continues. Pokerstars promptly paid everyone back.

Perhaps, I missed something too. But, what I did read was not clear as to whether the Feds allowed FTP as well as Pokerstars to pay of the U.S. players' balances. It sounded as if perhaps only Pokerstars was permitted to do so; it only took PS about a week to pop my money into my personal checking account.
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#28 User is offline   luke warm 

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Posted 2011-September-24, 06:27

View Postaguahombre, on 2011-September-23, 22:46, said:

it only took PS about a week to pop my money into my personal checking account.

it took an average of 6 weeks for me to get mine, from each of several different sites, but i did get it all
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#29 User is offline   Gerben42 

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Posted 2011-September-25, 09:43

View Postbd71, on 2011-September-22, 12:18, said:

I think this is not the most helpful comparison.

Less helpful comparison: Prohibited black market (A) vs. legalized/regulated market (B)

More helpful comparison: Legalized/regulated market (B) vs. legalized/unregulated market (C )

Arguing that B>A does not mean that B>C. I'm not taking a position, but since I suspect that most here will agree that A is the worst scenario, the debate should be between B and C.


A is the worst yet it is the case for many products. This is exactly the position of the Dutch government when it legalized soft drugs. What do you think the drug dealer's reaction was?

A) Cool, now I don't have to fear going to jail anymore?
B) Drat, now I have to pay taxes and competition is going to reduce my margin.

It certainly was B). Another situation is what's supposed to be the world's oldest profession. Those ladies in the red light district in Amsterdam have a labour union. If you are in the business, your work conditions will probably be best in Amsterdam.

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It simply never works to criminalize an activity that a large segment of the population really wants to do.


So true. People are going to do these things anyway, better legalize them so they can be controlled. This should be the way for gambling too.
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#30 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2011-September-25, 14:49

I forget who said it originally, but... "There are two kinds of people in the world. Those who want to control others, and those who don't." The former cause most of the problems, IMO.
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#31 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2011-September-25, 19:57

The reason it's tough to legalize and regulate things like this is political: legalizing something is interpreted as condoning it, perhaps even encouraging it. If the politician is supposed to be espousing conservative values, he can't vote in favor of legalizing vices without appearing to be hypocritical. That's why it's so difficult to legalize marijuana, gay marriage, various forms of gambling (except state-run lotteries, for some reason), etc. Conservatives are big on the "slippery slope" argument whenever these things come up.

#32 User is offline   aguahombre 

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Posted 2011-September-25, 21:15

But "legalize" means they made it illegal to begin with. Therein lies the problem; Legalizing is merely undoing someone else's meddling.

Regulation, on the other hand, is a response to a perceived need. Deregulation is also undoing someone else's meddling :rolleyes: but regulation by government theoretically occurs only when the private sector is incapable of handling things.

This post has been edited by aguahombre: 2011-September-25, 21:25

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#33 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2011-September-25, 22:54

Theoretically, maybe. In practice, regulation occurs when some group lobbies (or bribes) politicians to pass regulatory laws in their favor. It becomes worse when the politicians establish a bureaucracy with its own power to regulate. In theory, if politicians vote to do things we don't like, we can vote them out of office and put in somebody who will undo those things. Getting rid of bureaucrats is harder.
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#34 User is offline   mike777 

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Posted 2011-September-26, 09:50

"...Full Tilt allowed some U.S. players to wager with funds it never collected, creating what the government says was $130 million of "phantom money." The government said the business became a Ponzi scheme.."




http://online.wsj.co...3676923134.html




"Last Tuesday, in its amended complaint, the Justice Department accused Full Tilt owners and executives of paying themselves $444 million since 2007 while defrauding players"
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#35 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2011-September-26, 09:57

"Phantom money". Kind of like what the banks do with "fractional reserve banking". :rolleyes: :lol: :lol:
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#36 User is offline   ArtK78 

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Posted 2011-September-26, 10:01

View PostHanoi5, on 2011-September-22, 19:56, said:

In the end opinions are like asses and everyone should treat their religion like their penises, but we'll continue to discuss all this all over again.

I am not exactly sure what you mean by this last remark. It is certainly true that many people stick their religion in places where it doesn't belong.
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#37 User is offline   wyman 

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Posted 2011-September-26, 10:02

View PostArtK78, on 2011-September-26, 10:01, said:

I am not exactly sure what you mean by this last remark. It is certainly true that many people stick their religion in places where it doesn't belong.


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#38 User is offline   Foxx 

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Posted 2011-September-27, 00:52

View PostHanoi5, on 2011-September-22, 19:56, said:

In the end opinions are like asses and everyone should treat their religion like their penises, but we'll continue to discuss all this all over again.


So if I'm an atheist, are you saying . . . . . . .
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#39 User is offline   aguahombre 

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Posted 2011-September-28, 11:25

From all that I have read, the only person I believe is clean ---and truly cares about the players ---is Tom (Durr) Dwan.

But, I really really hope P.I. turns out to have merely made some questionable choices.
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#40 User is offline   phil_20686 

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Posted 2011-October-07, 05:11

View Postbarmar, on 2011-September-23, 14:29, said:

Another example is abortions. Before they were legal, women got "back alley" abortions, and complications (including death) were common due to poor conditions. Legalization meant that they could be done in legitimate hospitals and clinics, and the government and medical community could set and enforce safety standards.

It simply never works to criminalize an activity that a large segment of the population really wants to do.


This is a myth. Abortion was roughly as unsafe as any other surgery back in the day, but by 1972 the number of deaths from abortion was 39. That number rose again after abortion was legalised as abortion became more common, then fell again as surgery became safer. The number of deaths from surgical abortions is now between 20-30 in a given year. However the total number of deaths could be as high as 50 as the number of deaths from RU486 remains very unclear.


As of 2006 the FDA release a report in which there were 7 known US deaths from RU486, and 72 cases of septic shock resulting in blood transfusions which were a confirmed as a result of RU486, but it is very unclear what the detection rate is, and no studies have been done involving large enough numbers of people to pin down the death rate with any certainty. There was a death in the Canadian trial and an almost death in the US trial, but clinical trials tend to be on relatively small numbers of people. I don't even have reliable data on the total number of times RU486 was prescribed, although sales are up a lot since then. One trial of 2000 cases found that 8% suffered serious side effects including significant bleeding and sepsis, although no one died. However, developing sepsis during a clinical trial is likely to be picked up on far faster than in RL, and it can kill is a relatively short space of time (3-5 days). If you added up all the clinical trials you would get a death rate of between one in 10000 and one in 20000-but that sample is still too small, the last data I have for use is for 2005 when 13% of 1.2 million abortions were provided by RU486. That would give an implausibly high number of RU486 deaths, which just tells you that there are not any big enough studies to be accurate.
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