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Of course it's free rolling. If the player had lost 19K, do you think the book would have bothered to pay those losses back?
The book stated that correlated parlays were not allowed in all sports, except in North American football. That is a specific invitation. It's not a misprint or a typo, but a specific choice. If you open that door and somebody walks through it, you can't tell him he's trespassing; which is exactly what Canbet did.
Last edited by Dark Horse; 10-13-09 at 06:33 PM.
SBR Founder Join Date: 12/14/2005
But that was not the case. There were ten or more doors (to correlated parlays) that said: no access. And there was one that said: access allowed.
It's the difference between yes and no. The same difference that a bettor makes when he places a bet. This is commonly known as choice. A choice can certainly turn out to be wrong, but that doesn't qualify as human error.
The book allowed these bets, and it is safe to assume that losses were not refunded. Free rolling.
SBR Founder Join Date: 12/14/2005
Legality and corruption are not mutually exclusive. In many ways, quite the contrary.
This case is a good example of that, and a useful reminder that the offshore world is preferable over the politically 'legalized' European system. In the offshore world the best float to the top, and the public is the judge. This realm is free from politics in an almost spectacular sense. As soon as politics gets a foot in the door, corruption comes right along.
Sure, we have to be more careful not to send our money to pirate books, and to better navigate these waters we share our experiences and/or turn to the SBR flagship. To our standards, which are obviously higher than those of folks as betpartners, the IBAS ruling is absurd. That division is as it should be. The offshore world is as close to the idea of 'for the People, by the People' as we may experience in our time.
'They' call it 'illegal', because its outside of their control. But meanwhile, we, bettors and Bookmakers together, have created our own world where we are free to do as we please; without hurting anybody. The offshore betting world is a primary expression of freedom. (forget the Euro books. They dance to a completely different drummer...).
Last edited by Dark Horse; 10-14-09 at 03:48 AM.
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SBR Founder Join Date: 12/14/2005
You're free to do so. But I may have a little © in there. You may not see it now, but it may show up later...![]()
SBR Founder Join Date: 12/14/2005
FWIW I still do believe the human error argument may have some merit, depending on their past precedent. However I think that's negated by me for the fact they acted so retrospectively, which I wasn't aware of in the earlier post.
I still do think the SBR attitude towards European books in general is a little unfair and prejudiced by the fact they won't submit to their mediation. I don't entirely disagree with DH's opinion above by the way (it was actually the subject of a conference paper I wrote a year or so ago, in a slightly different context) - there are certainly advantages to player/company driven regulation, but I think going to the level of warning players off all UK books is going too far, and somewhat undercuts the issue at hand.
The player still has the right to (a) appeal the IBAS ruling, and (b) take the case to court under the new regulation, and I would encourage him to do so, if not least because it would set precedent for future IBAS decisions, which can only help.
SBR Founder Join Date: 9/8/2005
That's just stupid not paying. It couldn't have been that much money in the big scheme. That decision not to pay eventually will end up costing them far more than just paying.
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