Showing posts with label Casinos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Casinos. Show all posts

Monday, February 6, 2017

Russian Slot Machine Cheats: Casinos Have No Fix

I did not write this article.  It was sent to my site today by cdc gaming reports.  I found it interesting and think you may too.  The original story was written by Brendan Koerner. It may explain why some casinos do not allow filming for youtube -- see what missouri authorities found a 37 year old russian national named murat blieve was doing with his cell phone while purportedly playing pelican Pete!

IN EARLY JUNE 2014, accountants at the Lumiere Place Casino in St. Louis noticed that several of their slot machines had—just for a couple of days—gone haywire. The government-approved software that powers such machines gives the house a fixed mathematical edge, so that casinos can be certain of how much they’ll earn over the long haul—say, 7.129 cents for every dollar played. But on June 2 and 3, a number of Lumiere’s machines had spit out far more money than they’d consumed, despite not awarding any major jackpots, an aberration known in industry parlance as a negative hold. Since code isn’t prone to sudden fits of madness, the only plausible explanation was that someone was cheating.
Casino security pulled up the surveillance tapes and eventually spotted the culprit, a black-haired man in his thirties who wore a Polo zip-up and carried a square brown purse. Unlike most slots cheats, he didn’t appear to tinker with any of the machines he targeted, all of which were older models manufactured by Aristocrat Leisure of Australia. Instead he’d simply play, pushing the buttons on a game like Star Drifter or Pelican Pete while furtively holding his iPhone close to the screen. 
He’d walk away after a few minutes, then return a bit later to give the game a second chance. That’s when he’d get lucky. The man would parlay a $20 to $60 investment into as much as $1,300 before cashing out and moving on to another machine, where he’d start the cycle anew. Over the course of two days, his winnings tallied just over $21,000. The only odd thing about his behavior during his streaks was the way he’d hover his finger above the Spin button for long stretches before finally jabbing it in haste; typical slots players don’t pause between spins like that.
On June 9, Lumiere Place shared its findings with the Missouri Gaming Commission, which in turn issued a statewide alert. Several casinos soon discovered that they had been cheated the same way, though often by different men than the one who’d bilked Lumiere Place. In each instance, the perpetrator held a cell phone close to an Aristocrat Mark VI model slot machine shortly before a run of good fortune.
By examining rental-car records, Missouri authorities identified the Lumiere Place scammer as Murat Bliev, a 37-year-old Russian national. Bliev had flown back to Moscow on June 6, but the St. Petersburg–based organization he worked for, which employs dozens of operatives to manipulate slot machines around the world, quickly sent him back to the United States to join another cheating crew. The decision to redeploy Bliev to the US would prove to be a rare misstep for a venture that’s quietly making millions by cracking some of the gaming industry’s most treasured algorithms.

From Russia With Cheats

Russia has been a hotbed of slots-related malfeasance since 2009, when the country outlawed virtually all gambling. (Vladimir Putin, who was prime minister at the time, reportedly believed the move would reduce the power of Georgian organized crime.) The ban forced thousands of casinos to sell their slot machines at steep discounts to whatever customers they could find. Some of those cut-rate slots wound up in the hands of counterfeiters eager to learn how to load new games onto old circuit boards. Others apparently went to Murat Bliev’s bosses in St. Petersburg, who were keen to probe the machines’ source code for vulnerabilities.
By early 2011, casinos throughout central and eastern Europe were logging incidents in which slots made by the Austrian company Novomatic paid out improbably large sums. Novomatic’s engineers could find no evidence that the machines in question had been tampered with, leading them to theorize that the cheaters had figured out how to predict the slots’ behavior. “Through targeted and prolonged observation of the individual game sequences as well as possibly recording individual games, it might be possible to allegedly identify a kind of ‘pattern’ in the game results,” the company admitted in a February 2011 notice to its customers.
Recognizing those patterns would require remarkable effort. Slot machine outcomes are controlled by programs called pseudorandom number generators that produce baffling results by design. Government regulators, such as the Missouri Gaming Commission, vet the integrity of each algorithm before casinos can deploy it. 
But as the “pseudo” in the name suggests, the numbers aren’t truly random. Because human beings create them using coded instructions, PRNGs can’t help but be a bit deterministic. (A true random number generator must be rooted in a phenomenon that is not manmade, such as radioactive decay.) PRNGs take an initial number, known as a seed, and then mash it together with various hidden and shifting inputs—the time from a machine’s internal clock, for example—in order to produce a result that appears impossible to forecast. But if hackers can identify the various ingredients in that mathematical stew, they can potentially predict a PRNG’s output. That process of reverse engineering becomes much easier, of course, when a hacker has physical access to a slot machine’s innards.
Knowing the secret arithmetic that a slot machine uses to create pseudorandom results isn’t enough to help hackers, though. That’s because the inputs for a PRNG vary depending on the temporal state of each machine. The seeds are different at different times, for example, as is the data culled from the internal clocks. So even if they understand how a machine’s PRNG functions, hackers would also have to analyze the machine’s gameplay to discern its pattern. That requires both time and substantial computing power, and pounding away on one’s laptop in front of a Pelican Pete is a good way to attract the attention of casino security.
The Lumiere Place scam showed how Murat Bliev and his cohorts got around that challenge. After hearing what had happened in Missouri, a casino security expert named Darrin Hoke, who was then director of surveillance at L’Auberge du Lac Casino Resort in Lake Charles, Louisiana, took it upon himself to investigate the scope of the hacking operation. By interviewing colleagues who had reported suspicious slot machine activity and by examining their surveillance photos, he was able to identify 25 alleged operatives who’d worked in casinos from California to Romania to Macau. Hoke also used hotel registration records to discover that two of Bliev’s accomplices from St. Louis had remained in the US and traveled west to the Pechanga Resort & Casino in Temecula, California. On July 14, 2014, agents from the California Department of Justice detained one of those operatives at Pechanga and confiscated four of his cell phones, as well as $6,000. (The man, a Russian national, was not indicted; his current whereabouts are unknown.)
The cell phones from Pechanga, combined with intelligence from investigations in Missouri and Europe, revealed key details. According to Willy Allison, a Las Vegas–based casino security consultant who has been tracking the Russian scam for years, the operatives use their phones to record about two dozen spins on a game they aim to cheat. They upload that footage to a technical staff in St. Petersburg, who analyze the video and calculate the machine’s pattern based on what they know about the model’s pseudorandom number generator. Finally, the St. Petersburg team transmits a list of timing markers to a custom app on the operative’s phone; those markers cause the handset to vibrate roughly 0.25 seconds before the operative should press the spin button.
“The normal reaction time for a human is about a quarter of a second, which is why they do that,” says Allison, who is also the founder of the annual World Game Protection Conference. The timed spins are not always successful, but they result in far more payouts than a machine normally awards: Individual scammers typically win more than $10,000 per day. (Allison notes that those operatives try to keep their winnings on each machine to less than $1,000, to avoid arousing suspicion.) A four-person team working multiple casinos can earn upwards of $250,000 in a single week.

Repeat Business

Since there are no slot machines to swindle in his native country, Murat Bliev didn’t linger long in Russia after his return from St. Louis. He made two more trips to the US in 2014, the second of which began on December 3. He went straight from Chicago O’Hare Airport to St. Charles, Missouri, where he met up with three other men who’d been trained to scam Aristocrat’s Mark VI model slot machines: Ivan Gudalov, Igor Larenov, and Yevgeniy Nazarov. The quartet planned to spend the next several days hitting various casinos in Missouri and western Illinois.
Bliev should never have come back. On December 10, not long after security personnel spotted Bliev inside the Hollywood Casino in St. Louis, the four scammers were arrested. Because Bliev and his cohorts had pulled their scam across state lines, federal authorities charged them with conspiracy to commit fraud. The indictments represented the first significant setbacks for the St. Petersburg organization; never before had any of its operatives faced prosecution.
Bliev, Gudalov, and Larenov, all of whom are Russian citizens, eventually accepted plea bargains and were each sentenced to two years in federal prison, to be followed by deportation. Nazarov, a Kazakh who was granted religious asylum in the US in 2013 and is a Florida resident, still awaits sentencing, which indicates that he is cooperating with the authorities: In a statement to WIRED, Aristocrat representatives noted that one of the four defendants has yet to be sentenced because he “continues to assist the FBI with their investigations.”
Whatever information Nazarov provides may be too outdated to be of much value. In the two years since the Missouri arrests, the St. Petersburg organization’s field operatives have become much cagier. Some of their new tricks were revealed last year, when Singaporean authorities caught and prosecuted a crew: One member, a Czech named Radoslav Skubnik, spilled details about the organization’s financial structure (90 percent of all revenue goes back to St. Petersburg) as well as operational tactics. “What they’ll do now is they’ll put the cell phone in their shirt’s chest pocket, behind a little piece of mesh,” says Allison. “So they don’t have to hold it in their hand while they record.” And Darrin Hoke, the security expert, says he has received reports that scammers may be streaming video back to Russia via Skype, so they no longer need to step away from a slot machine to upload their footage.
The Missouri and Singapore cases appear to be the only instances in which scammers have been prosecuted, though a few have also been caught and banned by individual casinos. At the same time, the St. Petersburg organization has sent its operatives farther and farther afield. In recent months, for example, at least three casinos in Peru have reported being cheated by Russian gamblers who played aging Novomatic Coolfire slot machines.
The economic realities of the gaming industry seem to guarantee that the St. Petersburg organization will continue to flourish. The machines have no easy technical fix. As Hoke notes, Aristocrat, Novomatic, and any other manufacturers whose PRNGs have been cracked “would have to pull all the machines out of service and put something else in, and they’re not going to do that.” (In Aristocrat’s statement to WIRED, the company stressed that it has been unable “to identify defects in the targeted games” and that its machines “are built to and approved against rigid regulatory technical standards.”) At the same time, most casinos can’t afford to invest in the newest slot machines, whose PRNGs use encryption to protect mathematical secrets; as long as older, compromised machines are still popular with customers, the smart financial move for casinos is to keep using them and accept the occasional loss to scammers.
So the onus will be on casino security personnel to keep an eye peeled for the scam’s small tells. A finger that lingers too long above a spin button may be a guard’s only clue that hackers in St. Petersburg are about to make another score.


UPDATE: If you want to know more,  here's the latest update sent to my gmail today.          http://www.riverfronttimes.com/newsblog/2017/02/13/how-st-louis-casinos-busted-a-russian-crime-ring-targeting-slot-machines#

Saturday, November 12, 2016

Lucky Dragon appeals to Vegas Asian Gamblers.

There are no gamblers quite like Asian gamblers, and Las Vegas is about to open a new gaming resort designed around its Chinese visitors.  The Lucky Dragon Hotel and Casino is scheduled to open December 3. The property, funded in large part by Chinese investors will celebrate the opening with a traditional dragon dance and will offer bilingual staff and signage.  Owners have left no Asian superstition unturned. The front entrance is designed in a dragon motif.  A feng shui master blessed the kitchens. The main bar is eight sided for good luck. The number 4 is missing from the property - absent from room numbers and phone directories. Naturally the hotel has no 4th floor. Care was taken not to make the mistake the short-lived Quad made when replacing the old Imperial Palace. 

Resorts such as the Venetian, MGM, and Wynn already cater to China's high rollers.  The Lucky Dragon hopes to attract middle class Asians and Asian-Americans. On December 2 Hainan Airlines will fly the first direct flights from China to Las Vegas's McCarran Airport.  Already 206,743 visitors traveled to the city last year according to media sources. Lucky Dragon hopes to attract a large part of that demographic. Meanwhile ground was recently broken on another Asian themed resort even bigger than the Lucky Dragon. Resorts World is spending $4 billion for a 3200 room property on the north strip that will feature Chinese architecture such as the Great Wall.

The Lucky Dragon will offer authentic Chinese food in its 5 Asian restaurants.  No General Tso's or egg rolls here they say. In addition to live seafood flown in from all over the world, the property will offer the usual staples like congee, wonton noodles, and dim sum.  Restaurants will feature a luxury tea bar and food that might be found in Shanghi restaurants. The hope is that Asian visitors staying in other Strip hotels will choose to dine at the Lucky Dragon.  The emphasis on food Lucky Dragon owners can eschew other things not particularly important to Chinese tourists  such as whisky bars, nightclubs, and pools.

Funding for the Lucky Dragon was largely drawn from mainland Chinese investors through the EB-5 Visa program according to Los Angeles newspapers. The visa allows foreigners and their immediate family to gain permanent US residency in exchange for investment of $500,000 that also creates American jobs.


So many fun places to visit in Vegas. So many beautiful things to see and exciting things to do  -- and now there's more.  Enjoy this video of the construction of the signature dragon in the new Lucky Dragon Casino.  (Sorry for the YouTube ad.)

Saturday, August 15, 2015

French Lick Resort - USA Today's #9 Casino

Were there any surprises in my article yesterday about USA Today’s ranking of America’s top ten casinos? Were your favorite places to play missing from the twenty contenders for the top ten spots? Have you gambled in any of these casinos that made the cut and always left a loser? Would your top ten finishers have been very, very different from the published list? Would the twenty casinos the paper’s readers had to pick from included other choices? Perhaps some that wouldn’t be classed as resorts? And why wan’t Southern California Gaming Guide’s favorite Barona on that list anyway?

Articles I’ve read do not tell us the criteria USA Today used to pick the finalists. Nor how their readers voted for the top ten. But it certainly seems that the main criteria for making the twenty contenders list wasn’t lucky or loose machines in the casinos. It was the amenities offered to the resort visitors to ensure a memorable visit. 

I have found a good article at GamingZion.com complete with photographs that shows what might have swayed the judges to include three of the top 10 in their list of contenders: Thunder Valley in California near San Francisco, French Lick in Southern Indiana, and Red Rock Resort in Summerlin near Las Vegas. I won’t repeat the details here, but you can read the article and see the pictures yourself. You’ll agree the facilities are magnificent. The machines? Well that might be another story. I don’t know.

I have not gambled at any of the paper’s top ten except Pechanga, and Harrah's Resort Southern California, so I don’t have a lot of substance to add to GamingZion’s article, but being a relocated Hoosier, I will add a few words about Indiana’s only casino on the list: French Lick Resort. I haven’t gambled at French Lick, either, but I grew up in Southern Indiana about 60 miles west of the French Lick / West Baden area. My generation knew French Lick as the birthplace of basketball star Larry Bird, and the subject of somewhat questionable and risque jokes about the town’s name. 

French Lick is a national historic landmark. The resort is set in 2,600 acres of the breathtaking Hoosier National Forest. The two hotels were originally built in the late 1800’s because of the healing properties of the sulfur springs nearby. The casino was a $382 million restoration and expansion added in 2006. 

You don’t often think of Indiana as the home or vacation spot of famous people, but the hotel housed its share of celebrities. Bing Crosby stayed there. Abbott and Costello did a war bond drive there. The 1924 PGA tournament was held there. The site was a favorite of boxer Joe Louis and musician Irving Berlin. It was also the training site for both the Chicago Cubs and Chicago White Sox in 1943-44. 

Despite its reputation, the hotel was never “officially” used as a gambling hall, nor, contrary to legend, did gangster Al Capon ever stay there. Local stories say that the owner met Capone on the hotel steps and turned him away.
The rich and famous would vacation at the springs hotels for extended periods of time. Located between Louisville and Indianapolis, luminaries and the social elite would take a train to the Kentucky Derby and then stay at the French Lick Hotel until the Indianapolis 500. The owner Thomas Taggart served 3 terms as mayor of Indianapolis and briefly as senator. It was through these channels that the French Lick Springs Resort found itself the unofficial headquarters of the Democratic Party.

When the stock market crashed in 1929, the hotel closed and was sold to the Jesuits for a dollar. They operated a seminary in the buildings known as West Baden College until 1985. It was listed as a National Historic Landmark in 1974, but the building suffered considerable neglect over the years. Indiana Landmarks and an anonymous donor spent over $200,000 stabilizing the structure which was then sold in 1994 to a development company that included Grand Casinos Inc. The hotels and grounds received multimillion dollar renovations under the direction of Bill, Gayle, and their son Carl Cook, returning the property to the grandeur of days of yore. In 2007 the French Lick Resort was born.

Gambling was illegal in Indiana from inception: it was written into the original state constitution in 1851. The legislature did not approve Indiana’s first four gaming houses until 1996. The law required that they not be built on state land, so Indiana’s first casinos were all riverboat casinos. When gambling was approved at French Lick ten years later, the casino was designed as a riverboat surrounded by a small pond, and acquired the nickname: The Boat in the Moat. Two years later, the law changed, and the moat was filled. The boat was converted into the state’s first land based casino.

Today the resort features a 51,000 square foot smoke free gaming room with 37 table games and only 1,300 slots. Besides gambling, the French Lick resort offers hiking trails, horseback riding, and bowling. It was meant to be a vacation getaway for families - it has become USA Today’s 9th best casino.

Friday, August 14, 2015

USA Today Picks the Nation's Top Casino

There are more than 1,500 casinos scattered across the face of this great nation, more than any other country on the planet. What does that say about us? It says we Americans love to gamble! The problem is with so many choices, which casino should we  pick? USA Today recently conducted a poll to determine the best of the best, and they have announced their winner. Which casino is it? The winner will come as no surprise to most of you living in Southern California. 

If you are one of the hundreds of YouTube viewers who eagerly check their computers every Wednesday morning to see who won the Native American VS LasVegas competition for the week, you can probably guess. For the past 20 weeks ShinobiYT and VegasLowRoller have engaged in their friendly competition to see which is the better place to play, Southern California or Las Vegas. ShinobiYT, who leads in the competition, frequently plays at Pechanga, Harrah’s Resort Southern California, and Barona. His opponent VegasLowRoller plays off-Strip in Las Vegas usually at the Cannery. Like the USA Today poll, their results confirm what we California players all know: not even Vegas can beat our Native American Indian casinos. 

A panel of casino and gambling experts from Casino Player, Strictly Slots, and Abundant Travel magazines picked the 20 most deserving contestants for the USA Today poll, and readers chose the top ten over a four week period.

The top 10 winners in order are as follows:

 1) Pechanga Resort & Casino - Temecula, CA
 2) Mohegan Sun - Uncasville, Conn
 3) Foxwoods Resort Casino - Mashantucket, Conn
 4) L’Auberge Casino Resort - Lake Charles, LA
 5) Hard Rock Hotel & Casino - Biloxi, Miss 
 6) Harrah’s Resort Southern California - Valley Center, CA
 7) Borgata Hotel Casino & Spa - Atlantic City
 8) Red Rock Casino Resort & Spa - Las Vegas
 9) French Lick Resort - French Lick, IN
10) Thunder Valley Casino Resort - Lincoln, (northern) CA

Besides the top 10, which were determined by popular vote, the runner-up nominees include the following in alphabetical order: Aria Resort & Casino, Beau Rivage Resort & Casino, Bellagio, Caesars Palace Las Vegas, Cosmopolitan Las Vegas, Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Las Vegas, Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino, Mirage Hotel & Casino, Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, and Wynn Las Vegas. Did your favorite make the cut?

It appears from reading the top 20 listing that the critical criteria was not the looseness of the slots. It was more the attractiveness of the resort and its amenities - the fun and recreation to be had vacationing at these spots. Like Harrah's Lazy River feature, SoCal's only swim up bar. 

Pechanga held a $100,000 giveaway slot tournament July 22 to thank its loyal players for their support. If you get a chance to visit the Temecula, CA, area, stop by the resort/casino and see for yourself why it was the easy pick. The casino has over 3,000 slot machines, table games, entertainment, dining, golf, and 517 hotel rooms to make your visit an enjoyable one.