Quote:
Originally Posted by druidfluid
Yeah, once we were given the power to freeze accounts at will we just tossed in a couple names of people that annoyed us. What's your handle there btw ? No, that is only to say that of the hands we have that are storable (not played on browser) we have a smaller sample on 2 of them but Binbs and others have have mentioned playing with them all outside of that and all of them showing up on the site around the same time with very similar, very strange styles, and crushing everyone that we can find that has played them while seeming to play perfectly every time they are betting.
Having signed up for PIV, then moved eutarget(?) now to Tempura, I've watched this thread closely.
Considering the hand histories have been proven to be buggy, how sure can anyone be that they are going to be accurate enough to prove a point here?
Even then, all we have is circumstantial evidence, the circumstance being certain players losing to a style that they think they shouldn't, and looking for reasons why. I'm not saying that there aren't dodgy things going on, nor am I saying that an investigation shouldn't be done, it should.
Quote:
Originally Posted by druidfluid
We reported them as suspicious and they are being investigated (supposedly). Obviously it's unfortunate if someone's account is wrongly frozen but I'd rather take the chance of two guys unjustly not being able to play for a couple of days than many ppl potentially getting superused indefinitely(or until they bust). What would you have us do?
Uhm, not this...
Quote:
Originally Posted by druidfluid
Any way we could have the title changed to "Superusers found on play2b"? No "?" please.
I thought the idea of an investigation was to ascertain the facts of a situation, not hold an opinion as fact, pretty much negating the need for solid evidence. I'm not saying that there aren't dodgy things going on, but right now it is far from certain that there are superusers involved.
I just like the way that a bunch of winning players have managed to get suspended by the direct action of people who lost their money to them, with nothing but circumstantial evidence.