Difference between revisions of "Online Poker"

From SI410
Jump to: navigation, search
(Gambling Addiction)
(Future of Online Poker Ethics)
Line 20: Line 20:
  
 
===Future of Online Poker Ethics===
 
===Future of Online Poker Ethics===
The future of online poker ethics relies on creating better algorithms to detect collusion.  This is evidenced through the current software's inability to detect collusion at a relevant rate.  There have been creations of bots who collude together where the poker software was unable to detect that they were colluding.  <ref> https://pub.tik.ee.ethz.ch/students/2012-FS/BA-2012-03.pdf </ref>  Similarly, the software was unable to detect that they were computer programs and not real people.  It is possible to solve these problems through the means of either prevention or detection.<ref name="research_gate"> </ref> Advancements in these security aspects would catastrophically reduce the amount of cheating in online poker.  Additionally, the effects of gambling addiction are prominent and as the current upwards trend for new online poker users continues, the likelihood of gambling addiction increases.
+
The future of online poker ethics relies on creating better algorithms to detect collusion.  This is evidenced through the current software's inability to detect collusion at a relevant rate.  There have been creations of bots who collude together where the poker software was unable to detect that they were colluding.  <ref> Langner, T., Locher, T., Dr., &amp; Wattenhofer, R., Prof. Dr. (2012). Collusion in Online Poker Pays Of (Unpublished master's thesis). </ref>  Similarly, the software was unable to detect that they were computer programs and not real people.  It is possible to solve these problems through the means of either prevention or detection.<ref name="research_gate"> </ref> Advancements in these security aspects would catastrophically reduce the amount of cheating in online poker.  Additionally, the effects of gambling addiction are prominent and as the current upwards trend for new online poker users continues, the likelihood of gambling addiction increases.
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 04:43, 12 March 2021

Beginnings

The rise of online poker has been evident in the last two decades, much of which is due to Chris Moneymaker. In 2003, Moneymaker entered an $86 buy-in tournament on Pokerstars and came in first place with the reward being a spot in the $10,000 buy-in World Series of Poker(WSOP) main event. He eventually won this tournament and $2.5 million in winnings. This led to a boom in the online poker industry as by 2006, the field for the WSOP main event increased ten-fold and there were more than 38 million tournaments hosted by Pokerstars.[1]

However, in 2006 President George W. Bush introduced the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act (UIGEA), [2], which led to the illegalization of online poker in the United States. In 2011, Pokerstars was taken to court in United States vs Scheinberg, the founder of Pokerstars, for a multi-million dollar internet gambling business in violation of UIGEA. [3] This resulted in Europe being the powerhouse in online poker, evident still today.

Current Day

There are numerous big name sites that command thousands of players daily, such as PokerStars, Partypoker, and Americas Cardroom. This is a huge increase from the previous decade. There are cash games of stakes from $.01/$.02 up to $100/$200 and often tournaments with prize pools of over $1 million. Additionally, the emergence of Covid-19 in 2020 significantly hurt casinos but was extremely beneficial for online gaming. The Stars Group, owner of Pokerstars, reported sizable growth in their first quarter 2020 trading update, with the increased usage of their poker software as a major reason. The group's revenue of $735m for the quarter was a rise of 27% year-on-year.[2]

Regulations in the online poker industry have also become looser as time has passed. Most recently, Gretchen Whitmer passed the Lawful Gaming Act [4] which legalized online gaming, such as online poker, in the state of Michigan. The effects of this were recently realized, with Pokerstars being the first site available in Michigan and their MCOOP(Michigan Championship of Online Poker) series have already awarded over $2 million to users.[5] This is signaling that the current trajectory for online poker usage is only upwards for the near future.

Ethics in Online Poker

Collusion

A major issue within the online poker industry is collusion. This is when two players are sitting at the same table and give each other information about what hole cards they had in their hand, or other information that is unfair to the opposing players at the table. This is a very common technique and can be difficult to address. At Pokerstars and many other online poker companies, they can restrict two players from the same IP from sitting down at the same table. [6] This, however, is only a small blockade for players attempting to collude. Players can play from different locations and still give each other and unfair advantage against the rest of the players at the table. This issue is not much of a problem for live poker in comparison to online poker as there are fundamental computer science problems that are very difficult to solve relating to discovering the collusion. [7]

Bots

"Bots" are the term in the poker industry for a player who is sitting at your table who is actually not a real person, but rather a computer program. This computer program can be programmed to play the most optimal [8] poker possible, making it virtually impossible to beat them. In 2019, an AI named "Pluribus" decisively defeated six of the best players in the world over a long duration of hands played. [9] While the bots played against aren't this computationally advanced, they are only increasing in ability as technology improves and are still far better than the average individual.

Gambling Addiction

One of the psychological issues related to online poker is the idea of gambling addiction, or the the uncontrollable, compulsive urge to keep gambling despite the negative impacts that result from it. Gambling addiction occurs because the actions "activate the same reward circuits in the brain as drugs and the clinical characteristics of gambling disorder are the same as those of drug addictions or alcoholism"[10]. While this is a major issue related to gambling in general, it is compounded with the accessibility and improvements of the online gaming industry. Playing poker has never been easier as all it requires is to sign up online and make a deposit, a task that takes no more than five minutes. This increases the urge to compulsively gamble as there are virtually no barriers from stopping someone from doing so. Additionally, it is hard for friends and family to know that someone has a gambling addiction when they are doing it online as it is not as evident. This results in the downsides of a gambling addiction to potentially be much worse than if they had to gamble in person.

Future of Online Poker Ethics

The future of online poker ethics relies on creating better algorithms to detect collusion. This is evidenced through the current software's inability to detect collusion at a relevant rate. There have been creations of bots who collude together where the poker software was unable to detect that they were colluding. [11] Similarly, the software was unable to detect that they were computer programs and not real people. It is possible to solve these problems through the means of either prevention or detection.[7] Advancements in these security aspects would catastrophically reduce the amount of cheating in online poker. Additionally, the effects of gambling addiction are prominent and as the current upwards trend for new online poker users continues, the likelihood of gambling addiction increases.

References

  1. Vardi, N. (2020, January 25). The Incredible Rise Of PokerStars Cofounder Isai Scheinberg—And His Surrender To Federal Agents. Retrieved March 12, 2021, from https://www.forbes.com/sites/nathanvardi/2020/01/24/the-incredible-rise-of-pokerstars-cofounder-isai-scheinbergand-his-surrender-to-federal-agents/?sh=45d6c0ed4fb0
  2. 2.0 2.1 Insider, G. (2020, July 24). Online poker: A great comeback story. Retrieved from https://www.gamblinginsider.com/in-depth/9636/online-poker-a-great-comeback-story
  3. USAO - New York, Southern, Department of Justice. (2020, March 25). PokerStars Founder Pleads Guilty [Press release]. Retrieved from https://www.justice.gov/usao-sdny/pr/pokerstars-founder-pleads-guilty
  4. LAWFUL INTERNET GAMING ACT, MI, §§ Act 152 of 2019-432.301-432.322.
  5. PokerStars launches in Michigan. (2021, January 29). Retrieved March 12, 2021, from https://www.pokerstars.com/en/news/pokerstars-launches-in-michigan/69124/
  6. P. (Director). (2014, November 25). Inside PokerStars 4: How does POKERSTARS protect the game? | POKERSTARS [Video file]. Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d5upxYyeoQ8&t=220s
  7. 7.0 7.1 Smed, J., & Knuutila, T. (2006). Can We Prevent Collusion in Multiplayer Online Games? (Unpublished master's thesis). Conference: Proceedings of the Ninth Scandinavian Conference on Artificial Intelligence (SCAI 2006), Espoo, Finland.
  8. M. (2020, November 08). Learn about Poker: What Is Gto (game theory OPTIMAL)? - 2021. Retrieved from https://www.masterclass.com/articles/learn-about-poker-what-is-gto-game-theory-optimal#gto-poker-and-mixed-strategy
  9. Carnegie Mellon University, C. (2019, July 11). AI beats professionals in Six-player poker. Retrieved from https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/07/190711141343.htm#:~:text=The%20AI%2C%20called%20Pluribus%2C%20defeated,against%20five%20copies%20of%20Pluribus
  10. Chóliz, M. (2018, January 31). Ethical gambling: A necessary new point of view of gambling in public health policies. Retrieved March, from https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5797763/
  11. Langner, T., Locher, T., Dr., & Wattenhofer, R., Prof. Dr. (2012). Collusion in Online Poker Pays Of (Unpublished master's thesis).