Tuesday, December 29

Chance or Skill?

Aggressive Players

The Comparative Proof

One of the major problems poker faces in being recognized as a game of skill is that it is most commonly seen outside of the home as a casino card game.

All other casino card games, with the exception of the rare gin rummy or bridge tournament, are obviously games of chance, so it is easy to understand how poker often gets lumped into this group.

If we compare poker to these other card games, however, a glaring difference in play is exposed, revealing the true complexity of the game of poker.

For the benefit of the readers I’ll compare poker to two of the easiest to understand and most recognizable card games found in casinos today, casino war and blackjack.

If casino war doesn’t sound familiar to you, you probably know it simply as war. Yes, the popular children’s card game is spread in most casinos nowadays, usually with a house edge of two to three percent due to the casino’s betting advantage during a tie.

War is the most basic of all the card games, where nearly every decision has been made for the player before the beginning of each match. The dealer is blind to any other moves not outlined by the rules of the game and really so is the player, barring any sort of money shortage problem.

The outcome of every game is always predetermined, making casino war a pure game of chance, with little-to-no strategy involved in play.

Blackjack, on the other hand, is a less obvious game of chance. First, there can be multiple players in addition to the dealer, who, although not directly competing with each other, do effect the other players’ results. Second, while the cards are predetermined to come out of the shoe before any action is performed, players do have the chance to make certain decisions throughout gameplay that change where those cards end up on the table. And lastly, betting can be altered from round-to-round instead of from deck-to-deck, so players can make alterations to their bets if they believe certain cards are less likely to appear--that last one is called card counting and is not a recommend strategy in a live casino if you want to keep playing.

The problem is that all this choice amounts up to about a -.4 percent edge for the player, meaning that in the long run an optimal player will still lose his money to the house.

In blackjack the dealer is still blind to the larger game being played above each game round, he must always follow the predetermined rules of play set by the game regardless of how hot or cold the deck is. So in blackjack, a dealer can never be taken advantage of by a more knowledgeable player; weak dealer play simply doesn’t exist.

Conversely, in poker the house owns a zero percent edge; just a set rake is collected every hand, which resembles a house fee being paid by each player for playing in the casino.

This means the house has no stake in the game other than to keep the game active. Poker, therefore, has a metagame, a game played above the set rules of each hand.

In other words, while each hand in poker certainly has its optimal play, since players are playing against other players the hand is played through the added lens of the psychological states and playing styles of each player.

When playing an aggressive player the right play might be to call or raise, while when confronted by a passive player it might be best to fold.

Each hand, however similar, is completely different from the last in poker. No two hands in the whole of poker history have ever been completely the same, which cannot be said about casino war or blackjack.

This concept of a metagame in poker allows truly great players to, theoretically, never lose in the long run. A better player may get out drawn on occasion, but, as poker author Mike Caro states in his book Secrets of Winning Poker, the money always “flows from the bad players to the good players;” in the end the better player will always win.

The Legal Precedent

Discussions of game complexity and metagame strategy is all well and good, but what lawmakers really like to see is legal precedent--politicians never really like making a bold decision unless someone has already made it first.

There are two monumental cases on the side of poker being a game of skill on record, William E. Baxter Jr. v. United States and Commonwealth of Pennsylvania v. Walter Watkins.

The earlier of the two, Baxter v. United States, pitted poker hall of famer Billy Baxter against the IRS in 1986 over the classification of Baxter’s poker winnings.

Baxter argued that his yearly income was earned through playing high stakes poker and that his winnings should be taxed as earned income. The IRS disagreed, believing poker to be a gambling game of chance and therefore Baxter was not subject to write off his losses as tax deductible.

The court ruled in Baxter’s favor stating, “The money, once bet, would have produced no income without the application of Baxter’s skills. [ . . . ] it was Baxter’s extraordinary poker skills which generated his substantial gaming income, not the intrinsic value of the money he bet.”

Then the issue of poker as a skill game lay dormant until 2008, when a Pennsylvania underground card game was raided by police and it’s manager, Walter Watkins, was arrested for violating the state’s anti-gambling laws.

Watkins made the case that poker is, in fact, a game of skill, not chance and, therefore, did not fall under Pennsylvania’s gambling policy.

The court again ruled in favor of poker, Judge Thomas A. James Jr. ruling, “Texas Hold’em is a game where skill predominates over chance. Thus, it is not ’unlawful gambling’ under the Pennsylvania Crimes Code.”

Two well known legal rulings that show how poker is a game of skill, not chance, and therefore should not have online play be restricted by the UIGEA.

Playing the Game

Reportedly, when the United States was making it’s case against Billy Baxter in 1986, the judge who was ruling the case stated, “I find the government’s argument to be ludicrous. I just wish you had some money and could sit down with Mr. Baxter and play some poker.”

Oh, how I wish it was that simple. I think the easiest proof for showing how poker is a game of skill has to be the actual practice of playing the game.

If every politician could have a chance to face off against a world class player and see the difference in skill first hand I’m fairly sure no doubt would be left about what type of game poker really is.

I just wish politicians could have that opportunity... Oh, wait! They can!

In 2008, online poker pro Phil Galfond and his sponsor Blue Fire Poker issued a million dollar challenge to President Barack Obama or any member of Congress to play a heads-up match of poker to determine whether the game was one of skill or chance.

The challenge would require the politician to put up $1 of their own money--no that’s not a typo, it’s really just one buck--against Blue Fire’s $1 million. If the lawmaker beats Phil Galfond, the million goes to a charity of the politician’s choosing. If Galfond wins, Blue Fire would then claim that the skill debate would be settled.

Stated Blue Fire Poker, “No one in their right mind would turn down this challenge if poker were a game based on luck, because the odds are so far in their favor--putting up $1 for a chance to win $1,000,000 for the charity of their choice.”

No one ever said politicians acted as people in a “right state of mind,” however, and Galfond has yet to face anyone on Capitol Hill over the battle of poker’s status.

Even if this doesn’t sway politicians’ minds, I hope my examples and explanations at least convince some of you readers that playing poker is not actually gambling in the long run.

For those of you convinced, please write your congressman or congresswoman stating your support of poker as a skill game. Thank you.

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Monday, December 14

Reasons Not to Ban Online Gambling

Aggressive Players

As reported in the Tribune this past Saturday, November 28, the U.S. Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve are extending the date for U.S. based financial institutions to comply with new anti-internet gambling regulations by six months. Both sides of the debate have listed plenty of reasons why internet gambling should or should not be legal, so I decided to share with you, the readers, eight reasons why I believe internet gambling should not be banned.

Hurting an American Pastime

One of the biggest reasons the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act has yet to be implemented is the unclear status of online poker. However, the debate over whether poker is or is not a gambling game has already damaged the live poker industry. The announcement that the UIGEA passed through legislation not only sent the online poker industry into a downward spiral — for instance, once powerful online poker company PartyGaming lost £2 billion in stock value on the London Stock Exchange after the announcement — it hurt the live poker world as well. Just before the UIGEA was passed in 2007, the World Series of Poker’s Main Event managed to attract an $82.5 million prize pool. One year later, it was down under $60 million, the first decrease in WSOP history. Big brand names and casinos losing money might not warm your heart, but if you think about it, a decrease in live poker’s popularity hurts the little guys as well. I’ve talked to plenty of poker room managers, tournament directors and dealers, and they’ve all said that the proposed ban on internet gaming has crushed their incomes and is forcing many to look for work elsewhere. Ultimately, then, banning internet gambling both hurts one of America’s oldest pastimes and cuts legitimate, legal jobs.

Excessive State Paternalism

Now I’m not actually against big government — certain government programs are extremely important to the American way of life and I’m willing to have that political debate if anyone wants to — but I am extremely wary of excessive government paternalism. After all, this is still America, the home of the free, so when politicians start discussing these kinds of restrictions on an industry as big as internet gambling I worry about the extensions in power needed by law enforcement officials to complete their new job. It’s a point that has been brought up by a number of political commentators who fear that the Act creates an overextension of government power without solid reasoning. As a side note, banks are also complaining about the Act, stating that it would create unnecessary added pressure to their current and now heavily regulated operations. I’m not one to defend the banking industry either, but whatever, I guess sometimes you find yourself aligned with weird allies.

Unequal and Excessive Punishments

Interestingly, the federal ban on internet gambling through the implementation of the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act doesn’t actually mean a nationally agreed upon set of punishments for violators of said Act. Currently there is a wide discrepancy in punishments for internet gambling across the United States. While most states are so unsure of the UIGEA’s true meaning that they are unwilling to enforce any punishments on internet gamblers, the state of Washington enacted a punishment guideline in 2006 that made internet gambling in their state a class-c felony, the same class as possession of illegal weapons and sexual assault. The whole process of letting the states enforce their own laws against such a nationally widespread industry looks a lot to me like the passage and enforcement of the 21st Amendment in the early part of the 20th century, which created an unequal and ultimately pointless fight against the consumption of alcoholic beverages. Banning internet gambling, therefore, would be a tremendous waste of states’ time and resources.

Cheating in an Unregulated Industry

One of the major points made in the wording of Washington’s anti-internet gambling enforcement guidelines is that internet gambling creates a platform for American citizens to be cheated and swindled. And to Washington’s credit, there have been a few high profile internet gambling scandals, most notably the Ultimate Bet and Absolute Poker superuser scandals, which lend credence to their point. So yes, if internet gambling continues in its current format it is reasonable to claim that internet gambling scandals will continue. However, even with a ban on internet gambling in the United States, online casinos will continue in one form or another — the amount of money being raked in is just too lucrative for it to die out completely. Currently, a private gaming organization based in Canada called the Kahnawake Gaming Commission regulates the majority of the online gaming industry. Kahnawake’s impartiality has been called into question during a number of recent investigations, so I — as well as many others — propose instead of a ban on internet gambling by the U.S. Government, a push to make online gaming a regulated industry, allowing the government to have complete overview of the industry’s practices. This change should cut down on cheating more effectively than I think a complete ban ever could.

Problem Gambling in an Unregulated Industry

This one also deals with government regulation instead of a complete ban. Many American politicians who support the new restrictions point to a recent British survey, which found that 75 percent of players on internet casino sites could be classified as “problem gamblers,” compared to only 20 percent of players in live casinos. Again, the thought process seems simple: restrict internet gaming and you will cut down on out-of-control gambling. However, as was previously stated, a complete ban is not the most effective way to cut down on the problems of internet gambling — especially if internet lottery play and online horse betting isn’t included in the restrictions. No, instead we should campaign for government regulation. I believe if the government mandated a restriction on internet gambling deposits per site and per banking account, the issue would be significantly improved. It’s not a totally unrealistic idea, the online poker giant Full Tilt Poker currently offers a cutoff service, which restricts a customer from playing for a period of time if that player feels that they are having a problem. Blow that idea up significantly through government regulation, and not banning online gaming might actually cut down on problem gambling.

International Backlash

In 2003, while U.S. politicians were discussing possible restrictions on internet gambling, the tiny island nation of Antigua, where many online casinos are based, came to the World Trade Organization claiming that the United States was in violation of international trade treaties by restricting internet gambling. The WTO ruled in Antigua’s favor and, in 2005, rejected the United States’ appeal. However, with the passage of the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act in 2007, the WTO warned the U.S. that they were not in compliance with their ruling and threatened further penalties if the issue was not rectified. Although the temptation might be to dismiss Antigua as a small, relatively unimportant nation, banning internet gambling might not only prompt a stronger reaction from the WTO but hurt trade relations with Canada, France and the United Kingdom, all of which have large internet gaming industries that would be hurt badly by a U.S. ban on online gambling.

Tax Revenue

Okay, this is the big one. Arguably the chief reason that our government shouldn’t ban online gambling is the billions in possible new tax revenue the government would lose out on collecting. According to one of the world’s largest professional service firms, PricewaterhouseCoopers, license fees, waging taxes, individual income taxes and corporate taxes created for a government regulated online gambling industry would yield roughly $43 billion in tax revenue over the next ten years if implemented. To put that in perspective, the tax revenue from online gambling would be about the same as the entire 2010 predicted budget for the Department of Homeland Defense or, even better, more than half of the predicted ten year budget for the National Science Foundation.

Blowing Off Steam

Finally, how about the “blowing off steam” argument? My roommate is a full time law student, who enjoys coming home and working off some tension by playing a little online poker. I’d be surprised if in his entire online playing career he’s lost or won more than $30 in total, but he’s told me that he has fun learning and playing the game in this stress free way. And my roommate is certainly not alone, there are literally hundreds of thousands of recreational gamblers who enjoy playing the penny games online from the comfort of their own homes. You can’t even find stakes that low in live casinos anymore! For every story of some 16 year-old kid who stole mommy’s credit card and lost $1,000 online, there are thousands and thousands of people who never put their tiny bankrolls in jeopardy. And I realize there is the problem gambling argument, but, as I pointed out earlier, with regulation online gambling could become as docile as playing fantasy sports or even shopping online. So stop it government regulators! Regulate our online hobby, don’t kill it!

The move would make it difficult, if not impossible, to transfer money to and from online betting sites, effectively ending online casinos from hosting American players.

Let me make it clear, however, that online gambling is still a debated term and multiple institutions have come forward to question whether certain games of skill, such as poker, count under the new regulations--by the way, the already taxed gambling institutions of horse betting and state lotteries don’t count in the new federal ban.

That being said, what is being proposed could, in effect, cripple the internet gambling industry, a industry that has roughly half of it’s revenue stream based in the United States.The move would make it difficult, if not impossible, to transfer money to and from online betting sites, effectively ending online casinos from hosting American players.

Atlantic City Loses Zomer Gamble

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Wednesday, November 18

WSOP to Re-Commence with a Phil Ivey Endorsement

Aggressive Players

Poker superstar Phil “Poison” Ivey has decided that it may be good for poker to start to endorse the 2009 World Series of Poker (WSOP). After winning a position at the WSOP Main event table four months ago Ivey has begun to say positive things about being a poker player and playing at the WSOP event about to re-commence very soon. The games start again on Saturday, November 9, with publicity starting for Ivey on Tuesday, November 3, 2009, at 7 p.m. Eastern Time in the USA. Interviews can be seen on the television program “E:60” on cable sports network ESPN. Ivey, 33, was followed around by an ESPN camera crew as he flew in his private jet to casinos and personal appearances around the world.

Ivey is seen playing high-stakes, at $50,000 a roll, craps in casinos in Montreal and Connecticut, signing autographs in Austria and sliding over to Amsterdam for a diversion. The latest issue of “ESPN the Magazine” will feature Phil Ivey on it’s cover with an in depth interview about his love of other gambling past times, playing craps and sports betting. According to the magazine which is already out for public consumption when Ivey is not flying all over the globe in his jet he stays home to play as many as six online games of poker at the same time in his Las Vegas office.

ESPN is to televise the final table action commencing in just days. ESPN plans to televise the final table action after it concludes, airing highlights to the public the next day. This event could earn Ivey $8.5 million if he wins it. The poker superstar has not said much about the WSOP up until now.

Ivey’s manager said in the magazine interview, “I’ve convinced Phil to pull back the curtain just a little,”

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Saturday, November 14

Younger Men Dominate Table Games

Aggressive Players

By Gary Rotstein

New survey data of Pennsylvania gamblers supports what casino officials have long stated — they can expect a younger, more masculine group of customers if they add table games to their options.

The differences between slots players and those wagering on poker, blackjack, craps, roulette and other games were among the findings of a 2008 Pennsylvania Department of Health telephone survey.

Typically consisting of interviews with more than 1,000 Pennsylvanians monthly who are 18 and older, the survey found that 46 percent of them had gambled in some form in the previous 12 months.

That was higher than the 43 percent who reported gambling in similar 2007 surveying, although a health department analysis termed the increase “not a significant change.”

Among the 2008 respondents, however, there was significantly more gambling by males than females (53 percent to 40 percent), by whites than blacks (48 percent to 32 percent) and by those with household income above $35,000 (51 percent to 43 percent in poorer households).

Among the gamblers, 39 percent had played slot machines and 17.5 percent had played table games in the prior year — both far less than the 85 percent of gamblers who purchased lottery tickets. Because table games have been illegal in Pennsylvania, the 17.5 percent reflected play by those who traveled outside the state or participated in home games among acquaintances.

Women held a slight edge over men among slots players, 52 percent to 48 percent, but men made up three of every four table games players.

And while the 55-and-older population represented a greater share of slots players than either the 40-54 or 18-39 age groups, those younger than 40 made up 54 percent of table games players. The 55-plus population represented just 17.5 percent of Pennsylvanians who play table games, compared to a 40 percent share of slots players.

About half of table games players said they had also played slots during the past year, the survey found.

Sean Sullivan, general manager of The Meadows Racetrack & Casino, said the information meshes with what he has observed in nearly three decades in the casino business in states outside of Pennsylvania.

“Table games is a very social behavior, where it’s you and five or six people at a table, plus a dealer, and it seems to resonate better with a younger audience,” Mr. Sullivan said. “People in the older group, often they just want to sit down and relax.”

At the same time, he said that decades ago in Nevada, women commonly made up a clear majority of slots players while men gravitated to the tables. These days, he said, men are far more likely to also enjoy the slots.

Key lawmakers are currently discussing provisions of a bill expected to be enacted soon to allow table games at the nine existing Pennsylvania casinos, plus potentially five more. The games could be in operation within a half-year after passage of a bill, and Mr. Sullivan said it will modify the appearance of casinos.

“We’re looking forward to broadening our demographic appeal,” he said. “I don’t think it’s a paradigm shift for the property, but it opens the door to a younger set that might be leaving the state now and going across the border to West Virginia.”

In the state survey, known as the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, 1.4 percent of those who gambled reported that it caused personal or financial problems in the past year. The prior year, when fewer slots parlors were open, less than 1 percent reported such problems.

“This is not a significant change compared to the corresponding 2007 figure,” a health department analysis of the data said. “However, due to self-reporting this estimate may be low because respondents may under-report these types of problems.”

Health officials say the still-modest 1.4 percent willing to admit troubles jibes with light use by the public thus far of the state’s treatment and reimbursement system for problem gamblers who seek counseling.

“I don’t think there’s a whole lot of folks now running out to the casinos who haven’t done that somewhere before,” and are lapsing into gambling addiction from it, said Robin Rothermel, director of the health department’s Bureau of Drug and Alcohol Programs.

The same surveying is continuing as officials explore whether the opening of new casinos in Pittsburgh, Bethlehem and Philadelphia and the expected addition of table games creates more problem gamblers.

Studies have traditionally found a high degree of alcohol or drug use among compulsive gamblers. Among those in the 2008 state survey who had used alcohol in the past 30 days, 56 percent said they had gambled, compared to 34 percent of those who had not used alcohol.

Ms. Rothermel said the bureau will expect drug and alcohol treatment providers once they’re under new service contracts in July 2010 to screen their clients for gambling problems. Such screening is optional now.

Gary Rotstein can be reached at grotstein@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1255.

Les jeunes hommes sont majoritaires Jeux de Table

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Wednesday, November 11

Online Poker is Winning the Media Battle

Aggressive Players

If winning the battle in the media is a prelude to success in Congress for the argument to license and regulate online poker, then two recent articles are sure to help.

Two high-profile newspapers have spoken out on the issue over the past few months, each in favor of poker’ s cause — the Washington Post and the Los Angeles Times.

These weren’ t just news articles reporting on the latest court case or bill involving poker. These articles were written by nationally respected columnists weighing in with their opinion, and both showed an understanding of the issue that many people on Capitol Hill still lack.

“It’ s fair to say that the American approach to Internet gambling, which is legal in much of the rest of the world, is absurd,” Michael Hilztik wrote in the Times.

“Congress probably should fold its interference with Internet gambling and certainly should get its 10 thumbs off Americans’ freedom to exercise their poker skills online,” George F. Will wrote in the Post.

It couldn’ t have been said better if poker’ s advocates had written the statements themselves — and it’ s no coincidence that both papers spoke to the Poker Players Alliance.

“I think we see pockets of interest from the national media on this issue,” said John Pappas, executive director of the PPA. “I wouldn’ t say the tide is turning because it’ s always seemed the media understood this issue a whole lot better than Congress, that licensing and regulation is far superior than prohibition. Media has been there for a while, and we hope that it’ s going lead to changing minds on Capitol Hill.”

The PPA is getting plenty of mileage out of these articles, keeping office-supply stores in business with how many copies it has made of each. Each time a PPA representative meets with a congressman or senator, a packet of articles is left behind.

Will is considered a Republican columnist, making his article especially useful in trying to convince Republican congressmen, the key group with which poker advocates need to make progress.

Articles in small regional papers don’ t get much attention nationally but can be more important in influencing an individual congressman.

“It obviously helps when you go into (government) offices and can show articles from major publications,” Pappas said. “But smaller stories in hometown papers are great for congressmen because those are the papers their constituents read. A combination of both, hometown stories and national high-profile stories, works best.”

Media opinion pieces usually reflect the views of the people, which is why they capture the attention of Congress. Once officials on Capitol Hill realize that the overwhelming will of the people who elect them is to have the right to play online poker, legalization will occur.

Entrada Jugadores protesta del hombre de Poker Ladies 'Concurso

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Tuesday, November 3

7 Winning Poker Strategies for Texas Holdem

Aggressive Players

The tips and strategies below will increase your chances at winning Texas Holdem poker.

Play Tight

One winning poker strategy is if everyone at the Texas Holdem poker table plays loose, then no one can win. The players will trade pots back and forth while the casino slowly rakes all their money. The better Texas Holdem players will lose less, but in the long run, no one can win. It’s also true that no one can win if everyone plays tight. The tight players will trade smaller pots back and forth while the casino rakes all their money. The better Texas Holdem players will lose less, but no one can win.

Position

Another winning poker strategy is that most Texas Holdem poker players agree that more hole cards can be played profitably in late position than in early position. Any Texas Holdem hole cards that win money in early position will certainly win more money in late postion. Any hole cards that lose money in early position are probably not worth playing in any position.

Rakes

Casinos and poker rooms either rake each pot or charge the players on a time basis. It’s part of the poker player’s overhead. There are various methods of collecting from the players, but it really boils down to just two ways. If the money is taken from the pot, it’s a rake. If the money is collected from the players equally, it’s a time charge although it might be called something else.

Tokes

Tokes are an important part of the dealers’ income and part of the poker player’s overhead. You want the dealers to make their money, but keep your toking affordable.

Play Records

A fifth winning poker strategy is if you don’t keep records of your Texas Holdem poker playing, start now. Make a form on your computer and print some copies. If you have the software, set up a database on your hard drive. At least get a notebook and a calculator. If you need to make notes in the casino, write on the back of a keno ticket and copy the information to your play records when you get home. Accurate play records will tell you a lot about yourself, your strategy and your opponents.

Strategy Variations

Another winning poker strategy is Texas Holdem poker players and Texas Holdem experts know that you should vary your play to confuse and bewilder the other players. If you play every hand the same way, you risk being labeled a robot by your fellow players and you won’t get any respect at the poker table. Not only that, you’ll have to endure all the poker articles and player remarks about how easy you are to beat in Texas Holdem poker because you’re so predictable.

Practice

The most important winning poker strategy is that every serious poker player should practice on a regular basis. They must practice if they want to win. Poker is a very competitive arena, and you should practice your strategy if you want to play winning Texas Holdem poker.

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Sunday, November 1

Casino Stocks On The Rise

Aggressive Players

On Friday the stocks of major operators in the casino industry rose, surprising many analysts who have looked on as live casinos in Atlantic City and Las Vegas have suffered over recent months. However, the rise wasn't due to a boom in Las Vegas casino revenues. The rise in stock prices can be attributed to Macau, the Chinese gambling hotspot.

One of the world's foremost gambling hubs, Macau is known as the "Monte Carlo of the Orient." Over the past year it has been home to a host of gambling and casino related events including the Asian Poker Tour and other events hosted by online casino and online poker sites. Macau is home to twenty-eight casinos, which are government-franchised and regulated. The most popular game in Macau casinos is casino baccarat and other popular games include roulette, casino blackjack, keno, Sic bo and Fan-Tan.

As the Macau casino industry grows, so do homeland casino operators with real estate in Macau. Las Vegas Sands, for instance, has projects underway in both Singapore and Macau so even if they aren't showing huge profits in Las Vegas they can make up for it with big casino profits in the Far East.

Analyst David Bain, of Sterne, Agee & Leach, says that now is the time to buy. Growth in the casino industry, thanks to Macau, will be too big to ignore. Analyst Rachael Rothman, of Wedbush Morgan, raised her revenue expectations for Las Vegas Sands, as well as Wynn Resorts as well.

Macau isn't the only place where the casino industry is booming. Online casinos are also doing well, especially considering the economic situation. Many players that once visited the live casino cities of Las Vegas and Atlantic City have now found a home online.

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Friday, October 30

R

Aggressive Players

Rack - A tray that holds 100 poker chips in five stacks of twenty chips each.

Rail - The rim of a poker table or a barrier outside a poker area.

Railbird - Someone who hangs around a poker room who watches the games and/or is looking to get into action.

Raise - To increase the previous bet.

Rake - Chips taken from the pot by the cardroom for compensation for hosting the game.

Rank - The value of each card and hand.

Rap - When a player knocks on the table indicating that he/she has checked.

Razz - Seven Card Stud where the lowest five cards win the pot.

Re-buy - The amount of money a player pays to add a fixed number of chips to his/her stack in a tournament.

Re-raise - To raise a raise.

Ring Game - A "live" game that is not a tournament.

River - This is the last card given in all games. In Hold'em and Omaha, it is also known as 5th street. In Stud games, it is also known as 7th street.

Round of Betting - This is when players have the opportunity to bet, check or raise. Each round of betting ends when the last bet or raise has been called.

Rounders - Guys who hustle for a living. This is also the name of a popular poker movie starring Matt Damon and Ed Norton.

Royal Flush - This is an Ace high straight (A-K-Q-J-10) of the same suit. It is the best possible hand in poker.

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Wednesday, October 28

Poker Players Alliance Drops the Ball

Aggressive Players

The Poker Players Alliance (PPA) has wasted way too much time focusing on individual state cases and arguing whether poker is a “game of skill”.

Most of us already believe poker is a “game of skill” even though the British courts has declared poker a “game of chance”. Great Britain fully embraces online poker and sports betting, even though they want to tax operators to death.

The Poker Players Alliance (PPA), the leading poker grassroots advocacy group with more than one million members nationwide (nearly 10,000 in South Carolina), today lauded the ruling of a South Carolina court that confirmed that poker is a game of skill, and thus should not be considered gambling under the law.

The problem with the PPA’s approach is that they are failing to prioritize.

If you’ve been reading a few of the poker forums in recent days, you know the single most pressing issue right now is with the banking institutions being pressured to cut off transactions to and from payment processors that work with online poker rooms.

It’s a very real concern. There is one bank that has cut off ties to one such processor and others are likely to follow.

In the end, it won’t matter if poker is considered a “game of skill” or “chance” if none of us can play the game online.

The Interactive Media Entertainment & Gaming Association had tried unsuccessfully to challenge the Unlawful Internet Gaming Enforcement Act, which holds financial institutions responsible for policing online gambling transactions.

The US 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act (UIGEA) of 2006, rejecting arguments that the law was vague and intruded on individual privacy rights.

Now both iMEGA and the PPA must work (together) to try and solve the banking dilemma. Unfortunately, while iMEGA has shown a willingness to work with the PPA, the Poker Players Alliance wants nothing to do with any groups whose members include Internet bookmakers.

Meanwhile, the US Attorneys Office out of the Southern District of New York is reportedly beefing up its investigation into two of online poker’s biggest companies.

Costigan Media, which owns the Gambling911.com website, won a landmark decision in August when the Honorable Judge Laura Taylor Swain granted the electronic news site access to previously sealed seizure warrants issued by the New York US Attorney’s office. Costigan Media filed a Motion to Intervene in order to learn about and report more accurately on current online poker related investigations. Former acting deputy general counsel at Homeland Security, Baruch Weiss, represented Costigan Media.

Assistant US Attorney Arlin Devlin-Brown was permitted by the Court to redact certain names of individuals and companies that are part of an ongoing investigation. The decision requires that the US Attorney’s Office notify the Court of upcoming indictments.

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Sunday, October 25

Casino Gambling May Increase Further With New Obama Tribal Laws

Aggressive Players

The Obama Administration appears set on helping American Indian tribes through these tough economic times. One way that may occur is by allowing the tribes to build casinos farther away from their reservations.

Already in the US, there is a major casino boom taking place. Casinos are being built at a quicker rate than at any time in the nations history, and Obama and his administration may soon help that expansion grow even quicker.

The Bush Administration created a law that claims that Indian casinos can only be built if they are in commuting distance from a tribe's reservation. The Interior Department, however, is considering overturning that directive.

In recent months, there have been several lawmakers that have come out in favor of changing the laws regarding Indian tribal casinos. Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger in California has been one of the most vocal of these lawmakers.

Schwarzenegger leads a state that is among the leaders in the nation with the amount of tribal casinos that is within its borders. The governor not only wants the tribe's to be able to build more casinos, but he also wants California to legalize online poker gambling.

Not everyone is excited about the prospects of changing the directive. Surprisingly, it is some tribes that already have existing casinos that are opposed to the idea of allowing other tribes to build casinos farther from their reservations.

Any change in the laws would ensure that more casinos would be built. Existing casino owners are concerned that the market is becoming saturated and any further casino development could mean doom because of the competition.

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Friday, October 23

A Brief History Of Poker Chips

Aggressive Players

While playing poker an old saying is often repeated. It goes something like, "the man who invented gambling was a smart man, but the man who invented poker chips was a genius." When you really think about this it becomes obvious why this is very true. While having the same value, people have different views of poker chips.

While varying items of value have been used in gambling for many hundreds of years, actual poker chips did not really show up until the 1800's. As with many things, there is no "AHA!" moment where the very first poker chip was created and then gambled away. Chips were made from substances like wood, ivory, bone, and eventually a composite of clay materials.

From the late 1800's and into the early 1900's, clay poker chips become the norm. Just a handful of companies in the USA emerged to become the source of these chips. The name that most people associate with clay poker chips is Paulson. Paulson continues to make chips and is the current market leader for casino poker chips, supplying casinos worldwide. There are currently several other clay poker chip manufacturers, including companies outside the USA.

In the late 1900's a new ceramic poker chip was introduced to the market. The benefits of these chips is that they provided full customization. The entire face on both sides of the chips can be customized with full color images. Also, the edges can be customized with regular stripes, diagonal stripes, text, or anything else you can think up. Ceramic poker chips are currently used in dozens of casinos worldwide.

Back to the old saying about the inventor of the poker chip. How is that guy a "genius"? When gambling, if someone can push a pile of chips into a pot or towards a dealer it does not have the same "feeling" as pushing a stack of cash. Since the chips themselves are worth close to nothing relative to the value they represent, it can be easy to push around piles of poker chips without really thinking about what they are truly worth.

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