Tokwiro Enterprises is a private company that owns two online poker cardrooms, Absolute Poker and UltimateBet.
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The Absolute Poker Cheating Scandal Blown Wide Open - Freakonomics Blog ...
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The popular TV program 60 Minutes is considering airing a story on the online poker Absolute Poker scandal from Fall 2007. ... Nat's Poker Blog. All rights ...www.natarem.com/2008/03/10/60-minutes-considering-absolute-p...Tokwiro Enterprises is a private company that owns two online poker cardrooms, Absolute Poker and UltimateBet.
Absolute Poker
Absolute Poker is one of the world's ten largest online poker cardrooms. Established in 2003, it is licensed by the Kahnawake Gaming Commission.
2007 security breach
In September 2007, Absolute Poker began defending itself following accusations made by members of several Internet forums that the online poker room has a "superuser" account which allows one player to read the hole cards of another during a game. By October, widespread Internet allegations of cheating led to the Kahnawake Gaming Commission beginning an investigation.
Although allegations had been made about several accounts, one of the most remarkable pieces of evidence was a complete history of a tournament in which a player called "POTRIPPER" played. This history was far more complete than normal; it included all hidden hole cards for all of the players at the table, and the ip addresses of players and third-party observers who were watching the game via the internet. It was sent out, perhaps by accident, when a player complained about suspicious play. Reviewing the data, well-known mathematician and gaming expert Michael Shackleford said:
Hand after hand POTRIPPER's play is consistent with that of a player who had knowledge of every player's hole cards. The majority of hands show POTRIPPER bluffing at just the right times when his opponents were weak. Yet, when he was hopelessly outmatched, even with good cards, he laid them down.
Shackleford subsequently blacklisted Absolute Poker on his gaming related website.
On October 19, an unofficial source within Absolute Poker claimed that an employee had hacked the system to "prove a point". On October 21, Absolute released an official statement:
...it appears that the integrity of our poker system was compromised by a high-ranking trusted consultant employed by AP whose position gave him extraordinary access to certain security systems. As has been speculated in several online forums, this consultant devised a sophisticated scheme to manipulate internal systems to access third-party computers and accounts to view hole cards of other customers during play without their knowledge. 1 We will pay for all losses suffered by the affected players as soon as our audit is finished and the amounts are determined.
In November 2007, Absolute issued an interim statement claiming the employee cheating had taken place over a period of forty days and that the cardroom was refunding $1.6 million to affected players. The Kahnawake Gaming Commission issued its report on the incident in January 2008. Among other consequences, Absolute Poker was fined $500,000.
The Quebec provincial police opened an investigation into the ongoing matter.























