Thursday, November 24, 2005

Thanksgiving $5k Poker Freeroll at Doyle's Room


Monday, November 21, 2005

Titan Poker will host a $100 Poker Nation freeroll

Titan Poker will host a $100 PokerNation freeroll, as of the 3rd of December, 9 pm est, andevery Saturday there after. Check at PokerNation
for weekly password.


Saturday, November 05, 2005

Misc. Anti-Poker Cheat Articles

NY Times
For years, pundits have debated the relative merits of interaction in the real world versus interaction online. They appear to have missed a more pressing issue: where is it easier to cheat in poker?
The debate is of no small consequence to Sean Stephens, who oversees security for Paradise Poker, a popular virtual poker hall. Mr. Stephens is like a bouncer at a Las Vegas card room eyeballing the joint for cheats, the difference being that he can't actually see anybody.
"I suppose it is some disadvantage not to see personal interaction, but we have so many more tools to use," he said, referring to the data-collection devices at his disposal.
The growing popularity of gambling on the Internet is well documented, but the rise of interest in poker is a curious subset to the phenomenon.
Unlike virtual blackjack or slots, poker is played against other players, not a computer.
The actual players, far-flung in homes or offices, sit in cyberspace around a green felt table. A computer dealer doles out cards, then the players go head-to-head in games like 7-Card Stud, Omaha or Texas Hold 'Em; with a click of the mouse, they can call a hand, raise or fold.
"I yell at the screen, the game moves fast -- it's brought some of the fun of playing back for me," said Stephen Badger, 42, who in 1999 won the world championship playing the game Omaha, and took home the $186,000 prize. He plays poker professionally, a job that once entailed commutes to Los Angeles, but increasingly involves plopping down in his home office and competing against players worldwide.
Indeed, the electronic version of the game has developed a following, despite its questionable legal standing. Depending on whom you ask, the casino operators may or may not be violating federal and, in particular, state laws that regulate gaming activity, explaining why the casinos are typically based in the Caribbean.
At prime time, about 2,000 players compete in Paradise Poker, which is in Costa Rica, the majority playing at tables where the betting limit is $2 to $6 a raise, a modest sum by poker standards. At the high end, players can bet $40 a raise, still modest (considering that in Las Vegas or in Los Angeles, some tables permit raises of $800 or more), but the pots can still top $300.
The twist, poker aficionados say, is that the participants are not exactly playing old-world poker but are engaging in a mutated form of the game.
The Internet has eliminated the pokerface; it is no longer possible to study the players around the table to determine if they are fidgeting, nervously fondling their chips, or otherwise indicating they are excited, bluffing or distraught.
Mr. Badger, who has chronicled the difference between Internet and physical-world poker on his Web site, www.playwinningpoker.com, says the online world greatly eliminates the element of reading players, the emotional element of poker. In online poker, he said, greater significance is placed on math, on the pure value of a given hand.
That said, he has learned to pick up a person's bluffing or betting strategy with clues like how quickly players click the mouse to place a bet.
"Sometimes, people are habitually slow, and sometimes, they play like lightning," he said. "It's readable."
The absence of face-time has led to a debate about the relative ease of cheating on the Internet.
Two or more players, sitting at different computers, may be communicating by phone.
Wikipedia
Cheating is more common in poker than most people care to believe. Although most cheating occurs in private games that do not follow strict gaming procedures, it is also very common in regulated card rooms and casinos. Cheating can be done either by means of collusion, sleight-of-hand (such as bottom dealing, stacking the deck, switching cards etc), or the use of cheating gaffs (such as marked cards, holdout devices, glims etc).
Cheating is as common in friendly games as it is in high-stakes games. A card cheat may operate alone, but most of them operate in pairs or small groups. The groups are often composed of one card mechanic who is in charge of manipulating the cards, one or several shills who pose as regular players, and a muscle who acts as a bodyguard. Street gangs also often employ a wall man who acts as a lookout, however this approach is more common with three card monte mobs, and back-alley dice gangs.
Following is a list of terms used to categorize specific card cheats:
· card mechanic -- A card cheat who specializes in sleight-of-hand manipulation of cards.
· base dealer/second dealer -- Also called bottom dealer/second dealer is a cheat that specializes in bottom/second dealing.
· paper player -- A card cheat that exploits the use of marked cards.
· hand mucker -- A card cheat that specializes in switching cards.
· machine player -- A card cheat that uses mechanical holdouts.
· crossroader -- Originally, any kind of traveling hustler; but now the term is mainly use to describe cheats who specialize in hitting casinos.
Steve Badger
Badger has archived his RGP (rec.gambling.poker) posts and quite a few of them are useful regarding poker cheating. In this collection from late 2000, he addresses how Paradise Poker dealt with a cheater as soon as they were informed and at the end of the post, proposes a payout restructuring for tournament poker so as to diminish the motivation behind deal-making and haggling that occurs these days.In posts from January 2001, he argues that cheating occurs in poker everywhere but that he believes it to be more prevalent in ring games (real-world) than online because it's easier and more effective. Under the topic "Collusion Online or Poor Strategy" from April 2001, he talks about how the first two cheats he tends to suspect online are either collusion or timing-out cheating (where a player deliberately times out to misuse their "all-in") but also why he continues to play online despite the assertions of others that it's a losing game.In another collection of posts from August 2001, he addresses both online cheating and debunks many typical myths regarding online poker. Badger has been a strong proponent of online poker (which should not be taken as an endorsement by PokerTop10) and he responds to many concerns about online poker such as collusion as well as the belief (erroneous, in his mind) that one can't "read" tells online (his argument is that you can but it's very different from live play). He also agrees with Annie Duke (one of our top-10 women players) that it's easier to observe a player's betting patterns online than it is at a casino.In his Winner's Guide to Online Poker, his section on cheating discusses the one kind of cheat you should fear the most and both what you and the online poker rooms can do about them. Basic advice: walk away and contact Support.Finally, in this collection of posts from September 2001, he addresses the fear that online poker rooms cheat either by using bots (instead of real humans) or a human who, with the online room's help, has knowledge of all the cards. He argues that the diversity of winners, the existence of real humans who post and can be met in person, and the consistency of good players winning (and bad players losing) are all proof of the honesty of good online rooms. Whether you agree with him or not, many of his arguments are compelling and at least, food for thought.
Maryann Guberman of CasinoGaming.com
Luckily for us, an archive of Maryann's columns for 2000 and 2001 is available. She discusses shills, props, and backed players in one article and collusion in tournament play in another. (Note: this second article is hampered by formatting problems which place black text on a dark blue background, making it more challenging to read.) More articles include how "chatter" can be cheating, deal-making at tournaments, a poker-ethics test in the form of what-would-you-do scenarios (also challenging to read due to format problem), why a great poker player might cheat, and cyber-cheats (collusion)

Misc. Anti-Poker Cheat Articles

NY Times
For years, pundits have debated the relative merits of interaction in the real world versus interaction online. They appear to have missed a more pressing issue: where is it easier to cheat in poker?
The debate is of no small consequence to Sean Stephens, who oversees security for Paradise Poker, a popular virtual poker hall. Mr. Stephens is like a bouncer at a Las Vegas card room eyeballing the joint for cheats, the difference being that he can't actually see anybody.
"I suppose it is some disadvantage not to see personal interaction, but we have so many more tools to use," he said, referring to the data-collection devices at his disposal.
The growing popularity of gambling on the Internet is well documented, but the rise of interest in poker is a curious subset to the phenomenon.
Unlike virtual blackjack or slots, poker is played against other players, not a computer.
The actual players, far-flung in homes or offices, sit in cyberspace around a green felt table. A computer dealer doles out cards, then the players go head-to-head in games like 7-Card Stud, Omaha or Texas Hold 'Em; with a click of the mouse, they can call a hand, raise or fold.
"I yell at the screen, the game moves fast -- it's brought some of the fun of playing back for me," said Stephen Badger, 42, who in 1999 won the world championship playing the game Omaha, and took home the $186,000 prize. He plays poker professionally, a job that once entailed commutes to Los Angeles, but increasingly involves plopping down in his home office and competing against players worldwide.
Indeed, the electronic version of the game has developed a following, despite its questionable legal standing. Depending on whom you ask, the casino operators may or may not be violating federal and, in particular, state laws that regulate gaming activity, explaining why the casinos are typically based in the Caribbean.
At prime time, about 2,000 players compete in Paradise Poker, which is in Costa Rica, the majority playing at tables where the betting limit is $2 to $6 a raise, a modest sum by poker standards. At the high end, players can bet $40 a raise, still modest (considering that in Las Vegas or in Los Angeles, some tables permit raises of $800 or more), but the pots can still top $300.
The twist, poker aficionados say, is that the participants are not exactly playing old-world poker but are engaging in a mutated form of the game.
The Internet has eliminated the pokerface; it is no longer possible to study the players around the table to determine if they are fidgeting, nervously fondling their chips, or otherwise indicating they are excited, bluffing or distraught.
Mr. Badger, who has chronicled the difference between Internet and physical-world poker on his Web site, www.playwinningpoker.com, says the online world greatly eliminates the element of reading players, the emotional element of poker. In online poker, he said, greater significance is placed on math, on the pure value of a given hand.
That said, he has learned to pick up a person's bluffing or betting strategy with clues like how quickly players click the mouse to place a bet.
"Sometimes, people are habitually slow, and sometimes, they play like lightning," he said. "It's readable."
The absence of face-time has led to a debate about the relative ease of cheating on the Internet.
Two or more players, sitting at different computers, may be communicating by phone.
Wikipedia
Cheating is more common in poker than most people care to believe. Although most cheating occurs in private games that do not follow strict gaming procedures, it is also very common in regulated card rooms and casinos. Cheating can be done either by means of collusion, sleight-of-hand (such as bottom dealing, stacking the deck, switching cards etc), or the use of cheating gaffs (such as marked cards, holdout devices, glims etc).
Cheating is as common in friendly games as it is in high-stakes games. A card cheat may operate alone, but most of them operate in pairs or small groups. The groups are often composed of one card mechanic who is in charge of manipulating the cards, one or several shills who pose as regular players, and a muscle who acts as a bodyguard. Street gangs also often employ a wall man who acts as a lookout, however this approach is more common with three card monte mobs, and back-alley dice gangs.
Following is a list of terms used to categorize specific card cheats:
· card mechanic -- A card cheat who specializes in sleight-of-hand manipulation of cards.
· base dealer/second dealer -- Also called bottom dealer/second dealer is a cheat that specializes in bottom/second dealing.
· paper player -- A card cheat that exploits the use of marked cards.
· hand mucker -- A card cheat that specializes in switching cards.
· machine player -- A card cheat that uses mechanical holdouts.
· crossroader -- Originally, any kind of traveling hustler; but now the term is mainly use to describe cheats who specialize in hitting casinos.
Steve Badger
Badger has archived his RGP (rec.gambling.poker) posts and quite a few of them are useful regarding poker cheating. In this collection from late 2000, he addresses how Paradise Poker dealt with a cheater as soon as they were informed and at the end of the post, proposes a payout restructuring for tournament poker so as to diminish the motivation behind deal-making and haggling that occurs these days.In posts from January 2001, he argues that cheating occurs in poker everywhere but that he believes it to be more prevalent in ring games (real-world) than online because it's easier and more effective. Under the topic "Collusion Online or Poor Strategy" from April 2001, he talks about how the first two cheats he tends to suspect online are either collusion or timing-out cheating (where a player deliberately times out to misuse their "all-in") but also why he continues to play online despite the assertions of others that it's a losing game.In another collection of posts from August 2001, he addresses both online cheating and debunks many typical myths regarding online poker. Badger has been a strong proponent of online poker (which should not be taken as an endorsement by PokerTop10) and he responds to many concerns about online poker such as collusion as well as the belief (erroneous, in his mind) that one can't "read" tells online (his argument is that you can but it's very different from live play). He also agrees with Annie Duke (one of our top-10 women players) that it's easier to observe a player's betting patterns online than it is at a casino.In his Winner's Guide to Online Poker, his section on cheating discusses the one kind of cheat you should fear the most and both what you and the online poker rooms can do about them. Basic advice: walk away and contact Support.Finally, in this collection of posts from September 2001, he addresses the fear that online poker rooms cheat either by using bots (instead of real humans) or a human who, with the online room's help, has knowledge of all the cards. He argues that the diversity of winners, the existence of real humans who post and can be met in person, and the consistency of good players winning (and bad players losing) are all proof of the honesty of good online rooms. Whether you agree with him or not, many of his arguments are compelling and at least, food for thought.
Maryann Guberman of CasinoGaming.com
Luckily for us, an archive of Maryann's columns for 2000 and 2001 is available. She discusses shills, props, and backed players in one article and collusion in tournament play in another. (Note: this second article is hampered by formatting problems which place black text on a dark blue background, making it more challenging to read.) More articles include how "chatter" can be cheating, deal-making at tournaments, a poker-ethics test in the form of what-would-you-do scenarios (also challenging to read due to format problem), why a great poker player might cheat, and cyber-cheats (collusion)

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Not only is poker good for you, it's the American way, where winners play fair, have the right stuff, and nothing else matters, except, perhaps, a bit of luck every now and then. Lou Krieger

 

Poker is a microcosm of all we admire and disdain about capitalism and democracy. It can be rough-hewn or polished, warm or cold, charitable and caring, or hard and impersonal, fickle and elusive, but ultimately it is fair, and right, and just. ~L.K.

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Understand all of the potential consequences of your actions so that you may properly balance the competing goals of survival and chip accumulation.Every time the action passes to you whether it is to bet, check, raise, or fold, any action or inaction you choose will have consequences.  Therefore, it is imperative that you consider all of the consequences prior to making a decision.  In no limit hold ‘em tournaments, a failure to consider all of the consequences can be fatal.  If you make a substantial semi-bluff bet from early position after the flop, you must know what you will do in the event of a re-raise. Any tournament strategy should revolve around two main driving forces – chip accumulation and survival.  These two forces will frequently be at odds with each other because in order to survive, you must protect your chips and in order to advance, you must accumulate chips.  Therein lies the paradox of tournament poker.  You must accumulate chips without jeopardizing your own stack.  How do you accomplish this?  While it is impossible to play poker with zero risk, careful consideration of all of the consequences of every action on your part can certainly minimize your risk and give you a significant advantage.  Poker is a game of imperfect information, which is why it is so important at least to know all of the available information each time it is your turn to act.  Maximizing your knowledge will open the door for you to pick up chips at minimum risk. To learn more about this principle and other principles, read Tournament Poker and The Art of War.

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http://www.pokerplayernewspaper.com Poker news, tournament reports, strategy, biographies, stories and reviews Copyright 2005 Tue, 26 Sep 2006 12:30:12 -0500 http://www.lasvegasvegas.com/pokerblog/ http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss - - -

In the early nineteen-eighties, I defined a concept that would become central to my teachings about poker and the world beyond. It explains the enigma of relationships. It defines a world of comparative talents that isn't always easily listed in ascending order. Understanding it will make your life less confusing. Here is a lecture I delivered about a decade ago on the subject...

Caro's Conception: The lecture

It is a concept that takes us far, far beyond just the basic strategies of winning at poker. "Caro's Conception" makes us aware that there is a level of poker prowess that is very real, yet nearly not definable. This doesn't just happen at poker, but in real life, too. But, I'm getting ahead of the story. First, I've got to tell you what the Conception - or concept - is based upon.

It's based upon a puzzling truth, long known to those who ponder such things - the truth that strengths are not always ordered by hierarchy. Sometimes stren... Continue reading Today's Word is... Conception

]]> http://www.pokerplayernewspaper.com 3 Mon, 25 Sep 2006 12:00:00 -0500 - - -

If I told you that you could win a half of a million dollars playing poker without leaving your house or apartment, would that be something you'd be in interested in? Of course, you are! The World Championship of Online Poker (WCOOP) sponsored by PokerStars allows you the opportunity to play in the largest online poker tournament with prize pools that rival the World Poker Tour and the World Series of Poker. The most appealing aspect of the WCOOP is that you do not have to travel long distances to play against some of the best players in the world. All you have to do is turn on your computer and log on to PokerStars.

On September 16th, PokerStars kicks off the 2006 World Championship of Online Poker featuring 18 different tournaments, ending with the $3 million guaranteed NL main event on October 1st. Just like the winners at the WSOP, every event winner in the WCOOP will also be awarded a gold bracelet. The 2006 WCOOP will be the largest series of online poker tournamen... Continue reading 2006 WCOOP

]]> http://www.pokerplayernewspaper.com 1 Mon, 25 Sep 2006 12:00:00 -0500 - - -

In my prior article I addressed starting requirements of stud and how they differed from hold 'em. Let me address the later streets in this the second part of this two part series.

If you are selective on Third Street, you will generally continue to bet your Premium Pairs, even if they don't improve, unless you see opponents who seem to have surpassed your hand. On the other hand, if you are going for a straight or a flush with a drawing hand, you generally want to call or check, sticking around cheaply until you make your hand.

In Stud, unlike in Hold Em, you have extra information available to you to help you determine where you stand relative to your opponents - both in terms of your hand's current value and its prospects for improvement. You need to take advantage of this information.

You need to keep an eye on the cards you need to make your hand, as well as the cards that may help your opponents' hands. Stud is a game of live cards. If... Continue reading A Stud Lesson for Hold'Em Players, PART 2 OF 2

]]> http://www.pokerplayernewspaper.com 3 Mon, 25 Sep 2006 12:00:00 -0500 - - -

Last issue I revealed how our local maniac stumbled onto an extremely effective strategy in tournament play. The wording here has double meaning as Doug was usually plastered at this point in the tournament as a result of his intake of alcohol. While everyone else was tightening up their play hoping that someone else would get unlucky and bomb out, Doug was stealing pot after pot and increasing his stack size even more. It didn't matter to Doug whether he won or lost and as a result he had no fear. This made his aggressive play even more effective than usual and doubly so in tournaments (at least on the sober and reasonably minded players).

There are several strategies that one can utilize to make it deep in a tournament ( the structure of the tournament does influence these strategies ). The two most common styles that are successful in most tournaments are loose aggressive play and tight aggressive play. There are definite advantages and disadvantages to each style of ... Continue reading A Maniac Named Doug

]]> http://www.pokerplayernewspaper.com 3 Mon, 25 Sep 2006 12:00:00 -0500 - - - I've run into people even now who do not know that I have not dealt a card in over 5 years - sans some extra curricular activity that I am waiting to divulge. No matter, to them I am still that dealer that dealt them broke, a jackpot or have always given them good cards. So, even though your opponents at the table are either betting, folding, or receiving cards, the one person that players remember just as well are the dealers.

Conversely, when I dealt the cards and then played afterwards, I would make mental note of most of the player's tendencies as it related to some unconscious gestures they would do.

That brings me to the point that I was illustrating in my last paragraph in the last issue. People reveal more about themselves unconsciously than if they were to engage you in conversation. Before there was ever card games people were revealing "tells" about themselves on a daily basis.

Why else would a person gifted in this respect -readi... Continue reading Listen Carefully

]]> http://www.pokerplayernewspaper.com 15 Mon, 25 Sep 2006 12:00:00 -0500