Online poker bot

I played 400 hands against Cepheus, a poker-playing computer program developed by scientists at the University of Alberta, and I must admit that I am yet to be fully convinced by the scientists’ claims of its infallibility. People have been trying to create online poker ‘bots’ for many years now, though they are illegal on real money websites and security teams are constantly monitoring for suspicious accounts. The last thing both the sites and regular players want are successful bots scaring the more recreational types who are happy to hand over their cash. So claims by computer scientists in a highly respected scientific journal to have created a near perfect player will make the poker world take notice.

online poker bot
online poker bot

The choice of heads-up limit hold’em for Cepheus makes obvious sense: just two players and fixed betting amounts to keep things as simple as possible for the computer. However, one of the bot’s limitations appears to be that it did not seem to adapt against my change of style, something that could be its undoing. The most important thing in any heads-up battle is finding out your opponent’s flaws (known as leaks) and relentlessly exploiting them until they change their style to compensate. It’s the smartest and quickest way to win and means less reliance on the luck and the cards. If your opponent is too passive then you should raise and bluff more; if they’re too aggressive then become more passive with your made hand and let your opponent bluff into you.

At first, I was roundly stuffed by the computer’s non-stop aggression. Any bluffs I made failed miserably. To counteract this, I became more aggressive preflop and stopped bluffing almost entirely. Cepheus’s game did not adapt to my play and it made what I would consider several questionable plays. The program was reluctant to ever give up any sort of hand in a large pot making it easier to get lots of value from moderately weak hands.

I just squeezed out ahead over the 400 hands but the sample is still too small to come to any real conclusion about Cepheus’s claim to be an unbeatable poker program. Perhaps the best way to show off Cepheus would be to issue a challenge over a fixed amount of hands to a world-class professional player like Daniel Negreanu or Phil Ivey. This could create poker’s own version of Deep Blue v Garry Kasparov and would certainly be interesting for poker junkies like myself. I’d probably still take man over machine, though.

Will Online Poker

The year 2015 could go in two very different directions for poker in the United States. Legal and regulated online poker may grab a stronghold in the most populous state in the nation, but it's just as likely to be extinguished from the country all together.

Las Vegas Sands owner Sheldon Adelson will continue to put the industry on the defensive with his push for a federal ban of Internet gambling, and after the November elections he has his Republican cronies in control of both chambers of Congress. With Adelson calling in favors for his years of political contributions, the federal momentum is unfavorable.
Will Online Poker
While Adelson's push in 2014 didn't reach a head until December and the lame-duck session, it's expected to be a serious threat from the beginning this time around. As Poker Players Alliance Executive Director John Pappas put it, defense against Adelson's ban will need to be as aggressive all year as it was in the final weeks of 2014.

After there were no Congressional hearings regarding Internet gambling last year, there likely will be House committee hearings this year called at Adelson's request to discuss a ban. This could be good news, as Adelson's hypocritical claims against online gaming always do better when they can go untested in commercials than when they are picked apart by informed opponents and legislators.

In the sports world, it's often said that the best defense is a good offense. The optimum way to combat Adelson's Internet gambling ban would be for California to pass legislation adopting online poker.

There was progress made in California last year in terms of the different factions wanting to be involved in online poker coming to a consensus on many of the details desired in a bill, but the state never got close to moving on a bill.

Some key differences remain, mainly on the issues of a bad actor clause and inclusion of horse tracks. Assemblyman Reggie Jones-Sawyer indicated when he shelved last year's efforts in August that he planned on introducing a new bill first thing when the new session began in December that already had amended language agreeable to all sides.

That it's January and this still hasn't happened perhaps indicates that disagreements have not been worked out. In the meantime, Assemblyman Mike Gatto introduced his own online poker bill. Assemblyman Gatto told PokerNews that he believes there is a 50-50 chance of online poker being approved in California this year, and that a decision probably won't come until August.

Nothing else could deal a blow to Adelson's crusade as big as California passing a bill to legalize and regulate online poker. He'll have a hard time getting a bill through Congress when it directly opposes the will of the most represented and perhaps influential state on Capitol Hill.

The other big development of 2015 could be the return of PokerStars to the U.S. market. New Jersey State Sen. Ray Lesniak said in September that he believed PokerStars would be approved to operate in the state in a matter of weeks. Lesniak often has been optimistic about time frames regarding online gaming in New Jersey, but when he says something will happen it usually happens at some point.

The direction of online poker in the United States is difficult to predict entering 2015, but it's clear that this could be a pivotal year in determining if regulated online poker will continue to spread among the states or be abruptly folded.

Share Online Poker

Online poker players in New Jersey will benefit from increased prize guarantees for tournaments and a greater number of players available for cash games.

Micro and low-limit cash games and select tournaments will be part of the shared liquidity. Each site will continue to maintain their individual reward and VIP programs and players will earn points towards these programs only when they play on the specific site.

Both WSOP.com and 888Poker have agreed to limit the liquidity share to specific cash game and tournament tables in order to effectively monitor and ultimately determine what the right mix will be for the customer base.
Share Online Poker
"This is an excellent step forward for us and should help in building a larger audience and player base for online poker in New Jersey,” said David Licht, CEO of the All American Poker Network (AAPN), the joint venture between 888 holdings and Avenue Capital. "Shared liquidity will help create a better player experience, we hope will attract a diversity of players and begin to bring poker to a broader audience once again."

"It is important we continue to experiment and look for new ways to create stickiness," said WSOP.com Director of Online Poker Bill Rini. "Customers used to playing on our site will not notice anything different, except more robust action and bigger prize pools. We also hope this will help expand the market by offering more variety."

WSOP.com and 888poker.com will begin sharing $130,000 in guaranteed tournaments each week in addition to limit and no-limit Texas hold’em cash games and sit-n-gos. The following multi-table tournaments will be available on a daily and weekly basis on 888poker.com and WSOP.com in New Jersey.

$5,000 Nightly – 9pm EST
$10,000 Nightly – 7pm EST
$10,000 Sunday – 8pm EST
$25,000 Sunday – 3pm EST
The cash games sharing liquidity between WSOP.com and 888poker are as follows:

No Limit Texas Hold'em tables with stakes up to $0.25/$0.50
Fixed Limit Texas Hold'em tables with stakes up to $0.50/$1.00
All Sit & Go’s with buy-ins up to $5
The new daily guaranteed tournaments and shared liquidity cash games start today. The two Sunday tournaments and the increased prize pool for the Big Sunday tournament begin on January 18, 2015.

Poker Jobs

Starting your own online poker room. As we’ve sat shuffling the digital chips on the tables of PokerStars, PKR or Partypoker, how many of us have entertained the thought, albeit briefly, that we could create our own online card haven?

Would we make it 3D? Would we set it in space? Could you play poker as a character from Lord of the Rings? The possibilities are endless.
Poker Jobs
The harsh reality, on the other hand, is a little different. What does it actually take? One man took a brave next step and decided to find out.

Karl Mahrenholz, a celebrated English player and member of the Hitsquad, founded a room named Poker Encore. But creating that chip-shuffling dream was not without its challenges.

"It takes a clear vision of where your players are going to come from," says Mahrenholz. "What are you doing to do differently that isn't already well covered? I think people think it’s a lot easier than it is. Also, players aren’t going to come to play for you just as a favor. Everyone needs to be offered something, or else they will just play where they are already."

But when taking on the sizeable challenge of online poker’s big names, which boast thousands of users and healthy marketing budgets, Mahrenholz utilized already being a known member of the poker circuit to his advantage.

"It gave us a fair bit of visibility and I was able to build on my reputation to encourage players that they would be well looked after with us," he recalls. "That wasn't enough on its own though and we've always tried to run our own promotions on top of those offered by the network. The most popular of these has been our Las Vegas Team Challenge where we have sent three groups of friends to Vegas to play at the WSOP."

But building a poker room of even moderate means is a lengthy process, and Mahrenholz is quick to issue a warning to those who think it’ll be as easy as playing pocket aces.

"To be honest, in the current market, I don’t think it’s really possible for small players. When we started, iPoker was more open to smaller operators, and people like ourselves and Black Belt Poker were able to take advantage of that. Unfortunately, that’s just not possible anymore. I don’t see any of the smaller networks as viable alternatives. It’s a shame to see, but I guess it's the natural evolution of the market. If you have a genuine idea for how to attract players in volume then there may still be opportunities for partnerships but if you think you can set up and start offering huge rakeback, those days are gone."

But with such a crowded space, and with so much choice on offer for players, how does a poker room without a leviathan budget make themselves heard in the market?

The key, claims Mahrenholz, is to offer them something more; to set yourself apart with differentiation and deeper understanding of your players.

"As part of a network you can't differentiate on product," explains Mahrenholz. The key, for what his experience is teaching him, is to act at a promotional and service level - as that's where one can really make a difference.

According to Mahrenholz it is important "to run independent promotions and additional leaderboards" that can offer some extras to the players, as well as "to offer a very personal service to the players rather than to deal with them with a series of generic automated support response."

New Online Poker

Washington, the only US state that has made the act of playing poker online punishable with a prison term, may actually contemplate legalizing the game in 2015. At the end of last week, Representative Sherry Appleton introduced House Bill 1114.

Currently, poker players in Washington can play poker legally in licensed card rooms and tribe-operated casinos that have a state permit to offer poker games. PokerAtlas says that Washington has 74 live poker rooms. In spite of this, Washington behaves in a harsh manner towards card rooms. Last year, regulators shut down a low-stakes pinochle game that was being played at a senior center in Snohomish for the past 25 years.
New Online Poker
Click Here For Sites Still Accepting USA Player

However, HB 1114 has the power to change Washington’s attitude towards card games as it will legalize only real money online poker.

The bill says that the legislature has realized that the Internet forms a very important part of the lives of Washington residents, widely used for communication, commerce, and entertainment, among other things. It states: “Poker has long been an authorized activity in Washington State, and with the Internet as a technological aid, poker can be conducted in a virtual environment and played from the privacy of one’s own computer or mobile device.”

Although Washington has criminalized the act of playing poker online, residents still enjoy playing poker at offshore online poker rooms. The bill points out that the Internet poker continues to remain popular among Washington poker players in spite of the ban on it. It states: “To better protect the people of Washington from potential danger from, and to maintain oversight of the systems used to carry out Internet poker, the legislature finds it to be in the interest of the people to establish a regulatory framework by which entities, as authorized by the Washington state gambling commission or a tribal regulator, may offer poker games to players within Washington state over the internet.”

Currently, Delaware, New Jersey, and Nevada are the only three US states that have legalized online poker, but they haven’t been able to generate the expected revenues from the industry. All the states are now realizing the importance of liquidity-sharing compacts. Washington’s new poker bill provides for the signing of interstate liquidity-sharing deals.

California is also planning to legalize the game, but it has too many internal conflicts to resolve before it can actually happen. Other US states aiming to legalize online poker are New York, Illinois, and Pennsylvania.

Nevada Online Poker Revenue

While it is still too early to call online poker in Nevada a failure, things certainly are not going well in the Silver State. The Nevada Gaming Control Board recently released its November Gaming Revenue Report, revealing that online poker revenue continued its decline.
Nevada Online Poker Revenue
According to the report, total internet gaming “win” for November, which only includes poker, was just $641,000 statewide. That represents a 42 percent drop from the same period last year and a 3.6 percent decline from last month, when total online gaming win was $665,000.

The latter figure could actually be considered a point of optimism. The change from October 2014 to November 2014 was the smallest decrease in internet win in quite a while for Nevada. November was the fifth month in row with a drop in online gaming win, but of those months, it was the least painful. October saw a drop of 4 percent from September, which, in turn, witnessed a 6.6 percent drop from August. August was miserable, with online gaming win that was 22.5 percent lower than it was in July, and July was 7.6 percent lower than June. June was the last time the number increased, rising 20.3 percent from May, to $1.037 million.

The other thing that might be looked at as a silver lining is that November was the month that Ultimate Poker closed up shop. This, of course, is not good for the industry, but considering it closed about halfway through the month and gaming revenue was still only 3.6 percent lower than it was in October might be a good sign for the future.

There are now just two online poker sites remaining for Nevada residents, though it may as well only be one. WSOP is effectively a monopoly at this point with almost all of the online poker traffic. According to PokerScout.com, has averaged 150 cash game players over the last seven days. Its only competitor, the South Point casino’s Real Gaming, has just a single, solitary player during the past week and a 24-hour peak of only eight players.

More online poker sites are hopefully on tap to launch sometime this year, but no time table has been announced. 888, which provides the software for WSOP.com, has said it plans to launch its All American Poker Network (AAPN) in Nevada. Three sites be on the network at the beginning: WSOP.com, an offering from the Treasure Island casino, and a new 888 site. All would use 888’s software. Nevada also has an interstate poker compact with Nevada, which allows players from either state to play on sites based in the other. The AAPN would also look to include the three Delaware online poker sites, all of which also use 888’s software.