Online Poker: Does Everyone Cheat? Part II

 

Gray Area

The waters are muddy in the online shark tank. The only thing online and live poker really have in common is the name of the game. The instant a computer enters the equation everything is changed drastically. This spans from the way the cards are dealt to the add-on’s the end user has at their disposal. It is these differences that lead many to the dark side. For the rest of us the large gray area in between is where we make our home.

Light Gray

With the ability to save every hand history you’ve ever been involved in, or seen for that matter, comes the ability to examine and evaluate. There are several products on the market that provide the player with every imaginable poker statistic. Everything from simple money tracking to betting position trends are there for the player to take in and study.

This market then gave birth to another. You don’t have to study the data collected because HUD’s (Head’s Up Displays) can overlay all the information directly on the poker table. A listing of numerous statistics can be shown in real time. In addition many of these product’s are customizable so you can decide how much, or how little information you want to see.

With the presentation of all this information the player has a better understanding of their opponents. But even with all of this information there is still a human factor. Does the player know how to interpret all of it? Does this help lead to a greater understanding or is it just confusing? Ultimately it all still rests in the hands of the player.

Dark Grey

In addition to the functions listed above, there are programs that take the whole process one step further. For every possible decision the player could face the program will give you what would be the mathematically correct course of action. These programs can be found for cash games as well as tournaments. Going even further some will take player betting patterns into consideration. The only difference between these programs and a full blown bot is that a human still has to click the mouse button. The player that would use these tools really doesn’t want to play poker, they want to play a beatable slot machine.

So do you believe everyone’s a cheater? Do the tools available change the very concept of poker? I’ll be back in a few days with my conclusions, but in the meantime leave a comment and let me know what you think?

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Comments

Because of all the factors that could change the game.. I prefer live. period. I play online for fun.

I have PokerTracker but use it more for record-keeping than anything else. I’ve occasionally looked at some opponents’ stats, but don’t get nearly the amount of info out of it I know others do.

Speaking of yr “Dark Grey” example . . . I was invited by the maker of one of those programs to test out the software & review it on my blog. (It’s a program that’s specifically allowed on most all sites.) I tried it out a couple of times & decided I’d never use it, so I’m probably not going to review it. Besides not being interested in it, I agree it does edge over into that ethically-dubious area yr describing here — another reason why I’m not enthused to write about it.

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Nice set of posts. I’ve been thinking about some of the same issues. I’m writing a post now on where you are LEAST likely to be cheated online. I was originally interested in playing the big MTTs but now I think that’s by far the easiest area for unethical players to hack and compromise. But then in cash games you have the bots…

... lifeagrin wrote an intereting pot toay on Online Poker: Doe Everyone Ceat? Part IIHere’ a quik exerptTe water are muy in te online ark tank. Te only ting online an live poker really ave in ommon i te name of te game. Te intant a omputer enter te equation everyting i ange ratially. Ti pan from te way te … ...

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