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Old 10-17-2007, 08:51 PM
Johnny#5 Johnny#5 is offline
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Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 419
Default Re: Cheating at AP, updated cliff notes

I would certainly hope that any reputable website would never send out anyone else's hole cards to any other players while playing a hand, encrypted or not. I thought that was one thing poker sites insisted they did to help insure security. I don't know much about programming but it seems that two improbable things would have to occur for that to happen:

1) the team at Absolute that created the hand-dealing algorithm would approve their software having this feature. I would hope no single person would be allowed to design such a critical part of the program without oversight from others and they would stop such an egregious programming flaw from being implemented. However, after reading these threads it seems all bets are off concerning rigorousness from AP. Maybe the person went in and modified the program later without anyone noticing, I guess you can't put anything past AP.

2) If this information was being sent out to all players I would think that somebody with much more computer savvy than me would have noticed that "extra" information was being sent from the Absolute servers and, even if they didn't know what is was or how to handle the encryption, they would have made it public before now. I suppose, though, that if someone did somehow crack the encryption he would probably keep it to himself and utilize it for profit. Maybe someone did that, told his buddies and now there is a legion of cheats out there, who knows?

Does this make sense?