Quote:
Originally Posted by Afterlyfe
Not a horrible idea I just don't see it as practical. What happens when someone is webcam-confirmed? Botters could just verify the account through webcam and then start using bots. Monitoring thousands and thousands of "confirmed" accounts just doesn't seem realistic/cost-effective.
If I was a rec, and saw that I had to play on a webcam just to get rakeback, I'd be skeptical at the very least. This is 2018, most recs know what rakeback is. Not to mention the effort from a security team watching every reg on the site play for an hour to verify they aren't botting then comparing it to previous samples.
Not just previous samples, but also future samples, which solves your initial problem with verifying an account, and then turning it over to a bot. But this is something accomplished easily enough by a computer program, and once such software is up and running, it's pretty simple to maintain.
And as for account monitoring, it's not the "confirmed" or verified accounts that you need to spend time monitoring, assuming your verification process was thorough. The only accounts that need monitoring would be those that hadn't been verified. But even then, it's really only the unverified accounts that put in significant volume and win money, which need to be monitored. And you get the help of every single honest regular on your network to aid with "monitoring the unverified accounts", because everyone will be able to see which accounts have and have not been verified.
Admittedly, it would be a great deal of work to accomplish the initial round of verifications, as there would be many people trying to get verified at the same time. But once you've gotten through everyone who wants to be verified the first time, things get much easier to maintain from that point forward.
There are already many websites that require webcam ID verification for things like cryptocurrency exchanges and such. Like you said, it's 2018, this isn't something that no one has ever heard about before. It might not be known to everyone, but it's known to enough that no one should be skeptical of it to the point where it prevents people from signing up. The mere fact that you could advertise the process and thus your network as being the safest on the internet would easily bring in more people than the process scares away, imo.
I'm not really committed to this idea, I just think it's better than the current system, as I don't see the fatal flaw, though one might well exist. But so far I think it's a viable middle ground between things like random webcam verifications for only the accused, or no sit n crush / beast type promotions at all, or banning entire countries, or meaningless captcha nonsense that interferes much more with the play of an honest human regular than it does a bot, or keeping the status quo, etc.