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On Tuesday, Bill Rini wrote a great piece entitled “Who to Blame for Black Friday?” In it, he illustrates the “**wink, wink, nudge, nudge**” proposition that online poker has allegedly been from its inception and argues that, technically, you and I are to blame for Black Friday and its aftermath “because we didn’t demand better. We didn’t demand more transparency. We didn’t ask the right questions.”
I think that sounds good and is true in the sense that we each have to account for the decisions we make. But, I’m not sure it’s altogether accurate. And here’s why:
I’m a consumer. I’m not a marketing guru or a poker professional. I’m a mother who often makes purchasing decisions for my family on everything from what I buy at the grocery store, to clothes, cleaning products, entertainment decisions, and everything in between.
I’m not an expert and while I have the capability to research every decision I make, I generally trust what my local HEB is selling, as well as what’s marketed to me on the tube or radio, and in the newspapers and magazines I read. Even better, is when I get a recommendation from a friend. If it comes from someone I know, trust, and like, that’s pretty much where my business is going. It might not be the right way to make purchasing decisions, but it’s how I (and a vast majority of the US population) make such decisions. It’s also why marketing – like poker – is a multi-billion dollar industry.
Couple that purchasing behavior with the fact that I didn’t get into online poker in a real (serious) money way until 2009, well after the UIGEA made its big splash in 2006. The way I heard about where to play online poker was from sources like ESPN (marketed as “The Worldwide Leader in Sports”), where I could watch my favorite pros play in the WSOP and then see commercials for sites like PokerStars and Full Tilt. Not only were the ads shown on a respectable news channel, they were endorsed by the faces I’d see in those ads - my favorite pros like Daniel Negreanu and Phil Ivey (among many others).
In the face of the UIGEA, the roster of pro players for those sites only grew, and came to include well respected “regular” people, like Orel Hershiser, Dennis Phillips, and Chris Moneymaker, and well known celebrities, like Jason Alexander and Don Cheadle. As noted by Phil Ivey in his lawsuit against Full Tilt, “the great poker players have become celebrity figures….The celebrity status attributed to these poker players is akin to the celebrity status of professional athletes.” Not surprisingly, such people sell product.
To top it off, the Poker Players Alliance, whose mission it is to “establish favorable laws that provide poker players with a secure, safe and regulated place to play,” touted in a very straightforward fashion that the UIGEA “does not make it illegal for people to play [poker] on the internet.” (emphasis added).
So what’s a gal like me to do?
Rini argues that players like me “didn’t care.” Even in the face of scandal and fraud, “[n]umbers just keep going up.” He continues, “[a]s the money became more and more staggering in nature the online poker sites began to exert more and more power.” And everybody from the online sites, to the pros, to the television, online and print media in between rode that boom. And they rode it on the backs of people like me.
But here’s the thing – as Hunter Bick points out in this post for Drag the Bar – the UIGEA doesn’t even mention poker players. “It only mentions payment processing for financial institutions. It stipulates that financial institutions cannot lawfully process ‘unlawful internet gambling’ transactions. However, the law never defines what ‘unlawful internet gambling’ is, what games it applies to, nor does it provide any guidance whatsoever for what ‘unlawful internet gambling’ even means.”
I guess what I should have done was get a legal opinion before I played real money poker on the internet. Surely, that's what the PPA and the online sites and the pros (at least the ones with agents) did...right?*
As an attorney I’ve practiced municipal law, which in Texas often deals with open government and how governmental bodies deal with laws like the Texas Open Meetings Act. One important facet of the law deals with how such bodies make decisions. As you might expect, it’s often easier for a school board or city council to make decisions behind closed doors - less questions, and all that. But the law says, no, if it’s a matter of public business, then the public has a right to know about it.** To remain in compliance, the board or the city council will first ask their attorney for a written opinion before going into closed session. I would bet really good money that something very similar happened here for organizations like the PPA, the online sites, and likely many pros.
As just your everyday, average joe poker player, I didn’t know I should’ve been asking for one, too.
I agree that Black Friday will ultimately create a more regulated, and hopefully favorable, online landscape for players in the future. But, please don’t blame me and other players for Black Friday and its aftermath. A law was on the books and it was either not enforced by the Department of Justice, or it was not adhered to by the sites it sought to regulate, as it should’ve been.
Given all that, I believe blaming me for Black Friday is like blaming the mother whose child dies after eating an e-coli laced burger from the Jack and Crack dollar menu, or like blaming the owner of the 2007 Toyota Highlander Hybrid for the car accident on the I-5 when his brakes fail.
I don’t obtain a legal opinion before I buy a burger, much less a car. So please, Mr. Rini, don’t blame me.
If, however, blame must still be apportioned...the lawyers might be a good place to start.***
______________________
[1]* Full disclosure, I looked for news stories, tweets, and/or other resources to support the assertion that sites like Full Tilt and PokerStars (and/or their shills) relied on such opinions from their hired guns. I did not find any. If you think it’s because there aren’t any, please leave your contact info in the comment section below because I have a bridge in Brooklyn I’d like to sell you.
[2]** Section 551.144(c) of the Texas Government Code provides that: “[i]t is an affirmative defense to prosecution…that the members of the governmental body acted in reasonable reliance on a…written interpretation of this chapter in an opinion of…the attorney for the governmental body.”
[3]*** To be fair, as I said at the beginning of this piece, we each are accountable for our own actions and the "I didn't think I needed a legal opinion to play" is overly broad/simplistic. The truth is (as most people know), ignorance of the law is no defense. The problem here is that the law does not clearly speak to us as players. It's for that reason that I think Mr. Rini's argument is somewhat misguided. Otherwise, I like and agree with much of what he has to say (particularly his thoughts on player apathy re cheating, collusion, and other player misbehavior).
Showing posts with label online poker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label online poker. Show all posts
Wednesday, September 7, 2011
Friday, September 2, 2011
We the (poker playing) People
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When I first signed up for Twitter, I liked to scope out “Trends,” the #hashtagged list on the right side of the application's home page. I wasn't following many people at first and so trends were an easy way to drop in on conversations and find humor, 140-characters at a time.
Many other things remain unclear. What exactly is official White House review and just what sort of "response" can petitioners expect? Will this be like the conversations I have with my daughter when she doesn't want to clean her room, "I can tell you're upset honey but the room's not going to clean itself and we have company coming over." In other words, no amount of whining is going to change the fact that she is cleaning her room.
Bling Blang Blauow, people. It sounds like a plan that's right up our alley. #amirite?
You tell me...
When I first signed up for Twitter, I liked to scope out “Trends,” the #hashtagged list on the right side of the application's home page. I wasn't following many people at first and so trends were an easy way to drop in on conversations and find humor, 140-characters at a time.
Awards shows (#Oscars2011) and reality shows (#JerseyShore, #TheBachelor) often spark funny trends. Game days prove how obnoxious some fans can be (#GigEM!), and around the time #NeverSayNever came out, #Beliebers frequently crashed the system. #beiberfact
Some trends are maddening. I hate the ones demeaning women, but they appear a lot. On August 11th, I noticed that five of the ten top trending topics in the US included the word “#hoes.” I admit, I lost my cool and had to go all Amos Lee on that chit.
I don’t check out trends like I used to, but one caught my eye yesterday: #WeThePeople.
When I clicked on the link and read the initial blurb, I was skeptical. We the people sounds good. The words are familiar, unifying, and they begin the preamble to the United States Constitution, but....
As I looked at the information, I thought to myself, “We don’t need a freaking website to petition the government to hear our gripes – that right is protected in the First Amendment! I can do it any time I damn well please.”
Anger aside, I checked out the links, watched the video, and researched Great Britain’s e-petition service upon which #WeThePeople may be loosely modeled.
The service hasn't yet launched, but here are the basics:
- The system will allow we the people to create or sign e-petitions on a range of issues (whether citizens will be able to define their own issues or select from a predetermined list remains to be seen);
- If within 30-days an e-petition gathers more than 5,000 signatures, it will receive official White House review and a response; and,
- Once created within the system, the e-petition will have a unique URL known only to the initial petitioner, who can then share it with others to gain signatures. If it receives 150 signatures, the issue becomes "searchable" on the White House web site, likely leading to greater exposure and more signatures.
Many other things remain unclear. What exactly is official White House review and just what sort of "response" can petitioners expect? Will this be like the conversations I have with my daughter when she doesn't want to clean her room, "I can tell you're upset honey but the room's not going to clean itself and we have company coming over." In other words, no amount of whining is going to change the fact that she is cleaning her room.
Another issue is privacy. For now, all that's required to submit an e-petition is a valid email address.
I can just see it:
To: WeThePeopleE-Petition@whitehouse.gov
From: LosZetasPotSmugglersInc@420.mx
Subject: Just Say No to Legalizing DRUGZ!
That hypothetical is a joke, but in at least one country the use of e-petitions has resulted in some pretty silly (but telling) stuff. Americans are a funny lot and I'd be lying if I said I wasn't looking forward to this launch.
That said, I question just what kind of official White House response we the people can expect. The truth is, the UK (the country from whom we've at least sampled this idea) dropped their initial version of e-petitions last year because Englanders used it to "embarrass Tony Blair and Gordon Brown."
While they've since relaunched with some modifications, the sad fact remains that "official White House response," whatever that means, is not law and carries no real weight. So whether you stand outside the White House with a placard and a megaphone or submit an e-petition and gather a million signatures, the net effect will likely be the same: “for the most part, petitions rarely lead to any concrete government action.”
But put aside your cynicism for a moment. Accept the fact that no concrete action will be taken and recognize that, at most, the government will issue an “official response” to whatever issues build enough support and gather the requisite signatures. Don't we the poker players owe it to ourselves to demand at least that much?
If the White House is going to spend the tax dollars to create, fund, and staff a system that will probably get thrown out under the next administration, we might as well avail ourselves of it before (and until) it’s put to pasture.
Clicking buttons is what we do. If an e-petition will help us get back to doing it (or at least keep focus on the issue, force an "official response" from the White House, and educate some people in the process), I'm all for gathering behind one unified petition that frames the federal online poker issue in ways most beneficial to we the poker playing people.
Bling Blang Blauow, people. It sounds like a plan that's right up our alley. #amirite?
So how do we do it?
- One person (@kevmath?) serves as the lead and submits the e-petition on behalf of all poker players;
- The e-petition models those elements set out in the Barton Bill (and if that's not acceptable to all poker players, maybe @NoahSD or @ftrainpoker or @hardboiledpoker or @billrini or some other really smart person could come up with what needs to be included in the e-petition and post it on 2+2 for all to see);
- All poker players (and their friends, families, co-workers and pets) commit to signing it; and,
- Boom, we wait for our "official response."
Do we, or do we not, owe it to ourselves to at least demand that much?
You tell me...
***
Labels:
E-Petitions,
grass roots,
online poker,
open government,
poker,
We the People
Saturday, August 27, 2011
Early Morning Rant
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I'm writing this post under protest. My own self-imposed protest that no one's participating in but me; but still, under protest.
Protest because I'm so damn angry inside. That's pretty much the protest. That I'm angry. Because there's absolutely nothing else I know to do to address and rectify what's making me angry. I have no power to change things and politicians are stupid. So, I blog.
Five months ago, I had a plan. I had a goal. I was trucking along in my mind at what felt like the speed of light. Each day was mapped out and I was bringing all my forces, limited as they may be, to bear on the plans I'd set before me. I had the freedom to do that because I had the ability to take whatever knowledge and skill I had taken the time to cultivate and shore it up next to thousands of other like-minded individuals in a survival of the fittest competition - each day, every day, as often as I chose. The way I see it, that kind of competition goes on every day on the main streets of America when people make a decision to open a business and ply their trade. May the best man win and to the victor go the spoils.
Hard work goes into opening a business. Planning. Studying. Often, coaching. Financial preparation. And yes, sometimes, luck. A successful entrepreneur is the ultimate gambler, who does his homework better than anyone else. And keeps doing homework, long after his regular competitors have given up and folded shop, because there's always someone new looking to fill the void, to take the spoils. Plus, the best simply want to continue being the best.
I'm an entrepreneur. I started my own business in '08 and I can ply this trade anywhere in the world I'm licensed to do so. I can do it well, and I can continue to do it well so long as I stay on top of the law that is my area of practice and so long as I have clients.
Poker is Entrepreneurial
I can appreciate the argument that there may be some aspects of online gambling that are better left to brick and mortar endeavors. And, in light of the FT fiasco in the face of Black Friday* (for me, Full Tilt Poker will forever stand for 'Fucked The Pokerz'. Yes, I know that's an overly broad and simplistic statement. I don't care. I'm angry.), as well as the things I've learned about online poker since then, such as the apparent prevalence of ghosting (a la Girah, Nick Rainey, etc.), I can see that there is a need to regulate the entrepreneurial endeavor that is online poker. (*Wonderful articles explaining Black Friday can be found here, here, and here.)
But, come on. How hard is it to do? You open a site, the house gets a reasonable cut. Players compete fairly. A winner wins, the site reports cashes for all those who cashed, and those who cashed pay taxes on their winnings as required under the current tax code.
Somewhat simplistic. Maybe a little over broad. But, for the most part, this is exactly what a business does every single day it opens its doors, rings up the register, or cuts an invoice.
You might say, well yeah, but businesses have a lot of hoops to jump through before they can ply their trade and/or sell their wares. This is true. It's called 'laws on the books'. For example, a business owner can't use underage workers in circumstances that don't comply with child labor laws (governed in the US by the Fair Labor Standards Act and each state). And women are to be paid an equal salary under the Equal Pay Act. And under Title VII, a company can't discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, or national origin. And every business has to comply with the Internal Revenue Service tax code.
Companies follow the requisite guidelines, they get to keep on plying their trade and selling their wares. Companies get caught not following the requisite guidelines, they get fined, sanctioned, despised in the court of public opinion, and sometimes they go out of business. All, supposedly, for the good of the consumer and in the interest of capitalism.
I have no idea what goes into running an online poker site and I'm not a gaming attorney. Thus, my opinion/grain of salt. But you've got the entrepreneur [which I see as the site itself (the business, its investors and employees) and the poker players utilizing the site to 'do work'], and you've got the consumers [which I see as including both the entrepreneurial poker players and the recreational poker players].
It's not that difficult (ok, it may not be easy, but it is not freaking rocket science). A federal law requires:
I don't know how to effectuate any of this and I know I'm leaving stuff out, but this is my rant.
To protect against minors playing, require birth certificates (yes, everything can be falsified but, again, my rant). If the entity is going to be international, the age requirement in the country in which the individual lives controls.
To protect against super using, impose spot checking like drug testing and require a strict liability penalty for the site's owners and investors, large enough to hurt/put them out of business AND that mandates monetary remedy (payback) to impacted consumers.
To protect against ghosting, I don't know. Rewards for people who report it, maybe. Plus, it seems like there's got to be a way a computer program could monitor that.
Spent
This is just my early morning rantings. And now my anger is spent and I'm left with time on my hands. That's what got this ball rolling in the first place, though...I woke up this morning, checked in online to Facebook and Twitter. Found myself wondering who in the hell all these people were in my Facebook friends list, started deleting, found the exercise maddening, got pissed off that I was even messing with it, realized I'm spending way too much time acting a fool on social media, thought about why that was, remembered how my days prior to Black Friday had been scheduled and orderly, got pissed again, and viola - blog post.
I'm an amateur and this is what the free-fall has created in me. God bless the pros who lost their jobs. And screw the politicians who can't sort this out right.
I'm writing this post under protest. My own self-imposed protest that no one's participating in but me; but still, under protest.
Protest because I'm so damn angry inside. That's pretty much the protest. That I'm angry. Because there's absolutely nothing else I know to do to address and rectify what's making me angry. I have no power to change things and politicians are stupid. So, I blog.
Five months ago, I had a plan. I had a goal. I was trucking along in my mind at what felt like the speed of light. Each day was mapped out and I was bringing all my forces, limited as they may be, to bear on the plans I'd set before me. I had the freedom to do that because I had the ability to take whatever knowledge and skill I had taken the time to cultivate and shore it up next to thousands of other like-minded individuals in a survival of the fittest competition - each day, every day, as often as I chose. The way I see it, that kind of competition goes on every day on the main streets of America when people make a decision to open a business and ply their trade. May the best man win and to the victor go the spoils.
Hard work goes into opening a business. Planning. Studying. Often, coaching. Financial preparation. And yes, sometimes, luck. A successful entrepreneur is the ultimate gambler, who does his homework better than anyone else. And keeps doing homework, long after his regular competitors have given up and folded shop, because there's always someone new looking to fill the void, to take the spoils. Plus, the best simply want to continue being the best.
I'm an entrepreneur. I started my own business in '08 and I can ply this trade anywhere in the world I'm licensed to do so. I can do it well, and I can continue to do it well so long as I stay on top of the law that is my area of practice and so long as I have clients.
Poker is Entrepreneurial
I can appreciate the argument that there may be some aspects of online gambling that are better left to brick and mortar endeavors. And, in light of the FT fiasco in the face of Black Friday* (for me, Full Tilt Poker will forever stand for 'Fucked The Pokerz'. Yes, I know that's an overly broad and simplistic statement. I don't care. I'm angry.), as well as the things I've learned about online poker since then, such as the apparent prevalence of ghosting (a la Girah, Nick Rainey, etc.), I can see that there is a need to regulate the entrepreneurial endeavor that is online poker. (*Wonderful articles explaining Black Friday can be found here, here, and here.)
But, come on. How hard is it to do? You open a site, the house gets a reasonable cut. Players compete fairly. A winner wins, the site reports cashes for all those who cashed, and those who cashed pay taxes on their winnings as required under the current tax code.
Somewhat simplistic. Maybe a little over broad. But, for the most part, this is exactly what a business does every single day it opens its doors, rings up the register, or cuts an invoice.
You might say, well yeah, but businesses have a lot of hoops to jump through before they can ply their trade and/or sell their wares. This is true. It's called 'laws on the books'. For example, a business owner can't use underage workers in circumstances that don't comply with child labor laws (governed in the US by the Fair Labor Standards Act and each state). And women are to be paid an equal salary under the Equal Pay Act. And under Title VII, a company can't discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, or national origin. And every business has to comply with the Internal Revenue Service tax code.
Companies follow the requisite guidelines, they get to keep on plying their trade and selling their wares. Companies get caught not following the requisite guidelines, they get fined, sanctioned, despised in the court of public opinion, and sometimes they go out of business. All, supposedly, for the good of the consumer and in the interest of capitalism.
I have no idea what goes into running an online poker site and I'm not a gaming attorney. Thus, my opinion/grain of salt. But you've got the entrepreneur [which I see as the site itself (the business, its investors and employees) and the poker players utilizing the site to 'do work'], and you've got the consumers [which I see as including both the entrepreneurial poker players and the recreational poker players].
It's not that difficult (ok, it may not be easy, but it is not freaking rocket science). A federal law requires:
- no minors
- report earnings/tax as provided under the law
- no super using
- no ghosting
- no overly burdensome rake
- all the current "game responsibly" measures
I don't know how to effectuate any of this and I know I'm leaving stuff out, but this is my rant.
To protect against minors playing, require birth certificates (yes, everything can be falsified but, again, my rant). If the entity is going to be international, the age requirement in the country in which the individual lives controls.
To protect against super using, impose spot checking like drug testing and require a strict liability penalty for the site's owners and investors, large enough to hurt/put them out of business AND that mandates monetary remedy (payback) to impacted consumers.
To protect against ghosting, I don't know. Rewards for people who report it, maybe. Plus, it seems like there's got to be a way a computer program could monitor that.
Spent
This is just my early morning rantings. And now my anger is spent and I'm left with time on my hands. That's what got this ball rolling in the first place, though...I woke up this morning, checked in online to Facebook and Twitter. Found myself wondering who in the hell all these people were in my Facebook friends list, started deleting, found the exercise maddening, got pissed off that I was even messing with it, realized I'm spending way too much time acting a fool on social media, thought about why that was, remembered how my days prior to Black Friday had been scheduled and orderly, got pissed again, and viola - blog post.
I'm an amateur and this is what the free-fall has created in me. God bless the pros who lost their jobs. And screw the politicians who can't sort this out right.
***
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
Balance Schmalance - I want to play online poker
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Maybe it's because I've finally got some down time and baby girl's back in school. Maybe it was the nostalgia evoked from a tweet by @KaraOTR about the joys of sitting on the front porch and clicking buttons. Maybe I'm just a degen.
Whatever the case, I am feeling the void.
I miss my online poker.
I really hope I'm not losing whatever skillz I'd developed (if any...it's debatable) up to the point it all came crashing down.
(tears)
![]() |
My evolution to shark-dom is on hold... |
Whatever the case, I am feeling the void.
I miss my online poker.
I really hope I'm not losing whatever skillz I'd developed (if any...it's debatable) up to the point it all came crashing down.
(tears)
***
Labels:
nostalgia,
online poker
Friday, June 24, 2011
Barton Brings a Bill
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On a serious note (and especially if you live in Texas, since the bill lets states decide whether to participate, and, um, Rick Perry is our Governor), you should still contact your representatives by telephone and email to let them know you support it. When Black Friday hit, I wrote a Do Something post that contains all the information you need to know what to say and to whom to say it. You can bypass that link and go here if you just want to know who your reps are.
I'm not holding my breath, but I do think it's good news. Plus, it's Friday.
On that note, go ahead. Show us your cocktails (#SUYC).
I like that the short (ahem) title of this 101-page document is Internet Gambling Prohibition, Poker Consumer Protection, and Strengthening UIGEA (which, itself, stands for 'Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act') Act of 2011. You can read the Act for yourself, here.
Seriously? I mean, come on. It took up three lines just to type that thing, guys. The initials alone make up a 9-letter acronym: IGPPCPSUA. Which, if said aloud, would sound something like "iggpeepeeceepeesewa."
That's not going to work, people.
Accordingly, I propose: GMTFBO, which...well, I'll let you wiggle out what that stands for (I will personally send a homemade music CD or, if you'd rather, a PokerLawyer t-shirt (yeah, it'll be homemade, too), to the first person who guesses my acronym in the comments below).
It's 100 pages, so I'm still in the process of reading it, but @NoahSD over at Subject:Poker has done a nice initial review and there are already good articles on the interwebs, like this one, from @OskarGarcia. [Edit - @PokerScout1 also has a good analysis, which you can read here.]
I know what you're wondering: "So when's it going to pass so I can GMTFBO?!" This may help:
On a serious note (and especially if you live in Texas, since the bill lets states decide whether to participate, and, um, Rick Perry is our Governor), you should still contact your representatives by telephone and email to let them know you support it. When Black Friday hit, I wrote a Do Something post that contains all the information you need to know what to say and to whom to say it. You can bypass that link and go here if you just want to know who your reps are.
I'm not holding my breath, but I do think it's good news. Plus, it's Friday.
On that note, go ahead. Show us your cocktails (#SUYC).
Thursday, April 21, 2011
PoPo Shut Me Down
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I am sometimes asked whether the avatar on my blog and Twitter is me. It's not. I blog and tweet behind an avatar because to use my real name would, on a google search of said name, result in a bunch of un-lawyer-ly information illustrating how deep my love for poker runs (not to mention a bunch of dumb Twitter rants).
While I suppose in this day and age there's nothing really wrong with that, I am not currently making my living from poker and so it matters to me what opposing counsels and clients think. Most non-poker playing clients generally don't like the thought that, during any downtime, their attorneys are not living and breathing their case and business matters.
Poker is an easy game to play, but a tough game to master; and, to get good enough to be a profitable player, you have to play. A lot. I've been playing poker recreationally since the birth of my daughter (who's 6 now), and I only began taking the game serious in late 2009. Since I live in Texas, online poker is really the only way I can play with the regularity and volume that's required to get good. Indeed, when I play, study, and review hands, I'm always mindful of Malcolm Gladwell's 10,000 hour rule...practice makes perfect.
Before last Friday, I was practicing a lot. (To understand what Friday, also known as Black Friday, means to online poker players, read this and this.) I had reached the point where I was actually making money at the game. My cash game is still wildly uneven and always a threat to my bankroll, but my tournament play was really coming along. Since 2006 (and remember b/w 2006 and late 2009 it was all recreational - I didn't even learn the concept of bankroll management until 2009!), I have maintained a nearly 10% ROI. I know it's not that great, but as one of my coaches told me, anyone who can make even $1 profit in this game is doing better than the vast majority of people who play. Poker is, after all, a zero sum game...if someone else is winning, you're losing.
Because I was showing improvement and because I could play on-line, I made a decision earlier this year to cut back on my practice in order to grind the volume necessary to improve and to give myself a realistic picture of whether or not I had what it takes to make poker a profession. Everyone in my family was on board with that idea and supportive of me pursuing my dream. Absent their support, I honestly couldn't even consider doing this.
After last Friday, though, that support has given way to questioning and concern for the very legality of this passion of mine. I'm thankful now that I've blogged and twittered under my Poker Girl With Cards avatar because if the people who know and love me are feeling this way, I can only imagine what my clients and opposing counsels would be thinking. It wouldn't be good.
Unfortunately, I don't live where I can just drive to a casino and take my shot that way. So for the foreseeable future, my pokering will have to be live, which means I'll really have to coordinate to make the trips cost-effective and workable for my family. I'm still planning on the WSOP this summer and will also likely play the WSOP-c event in Louisiana. But after that, who knows? And while I'd hoped to play tons online with measured practice to gear up for the series, I'm now forced to rely on finding a safe local game and on the study and review of HHs from previous tournaments.
Last but not least, Black Friday has forced me to get back into full-time lawyering. I'm thankful I've got that to fall back on but I have to admit it's just not as much fun. Seriously, give me being one-outed on the river any day. Please.
Remind me of that when they get the pipeline open again.
Until then, it's back to Vernon's and Lexis for me. In the meantime, I hope you're able to play. And if you are, thank your lucky stars and run good, amigos.
I am sometimes asked whether the avatar on my blog and Twitter is me. It's not. I blog and tweet behind an avatar because to use my real name would, on a google search of said name, result in a bunch of un-lawyer-ly information illustrating how deep my love for poker runs (not to mention a bunch of dumb Twitter rants).
While I suppose in this day and age there's nothing really wrong with that, I am not currently making my living from poker and so it matters to me what opposing counsels and clients think. Most non-poker playing clients generally don't like the thought that, during any downtime, their attorneys are not living and breathing their case and business matters.
Poker is an easy game to play, but a tough game to master; and, to get good enough to be a profitable player, you have to play. A lot. I've been playing poker recreationally since the birth of my daughter (who's 6 now), and I only began taking the game serious in late 2009. Since I live in Texas, online poker is really the only way I can play with the regularity and volume that's required to get good. Indeed, when I play, study, and review hands, I'm always mindful of Malcolm Gladwell's 10,000 hour rule...practice makes perfect.
Before last Friday, I was practicing a lot. (To understand what Friday, also known as Black Friday, means to online poker players, read this and this.) I had reached the point where I was actually making money at the game. My cash game is still wildly uneven and always a threat to my bankroll, but my tournament play was really coming along. Since 2006 (and remember b/w 2006 and late 2009 it was all recreational - I didn't even learn the concept of bankroll management until 2009!), I have maintained a nearly 10% ROI. I know it's not that great, but as one of my coaches told me, anyone who can make even $1 profit in this game is doing better than the vast majority of people who play. Poker is, after all, a zero sum game...if someone else is winning, you're losing.
Because I was showing improvement and because I could play on-line, I made a decision earlier this year to cut back on my practice in order to grind the volume necessary to improve and to give myself a realistic picture of whether or not I had what it takes to make poker a profession. Everyone in my family was on board with that idea and supportive of me pursuing my dream. Absent their support, I honestly couldn't even consider doing this.
After last Friday, though, that support has given way to questioning and concern for the very legality of this passion of mine. I'm thankful now that I've blogged and twittered under my Poker Girl With Cards avatar because if the people who know and love me are feeling this way, I can only imagine what my clients and opposing counsels would be thinking. It wouldn't be good.
Unfortunately, I don't live where I can just drive to a casino and take my shot that way. So for the foreseeable future, my pokering will have to be live, which means I'll really have to coordinate to make the trips cost-effective and workable for my family. I'm still planning on the WSOP this summer and will also likely play the WSOP-c event in Louisiana. But after that, who knows? And while I'd hoped to play tons online with measured practice to gear up for the series, I'm now forced to rely on finding a safe local game and on the study and review of HHs from previous tournaments.
Last but not least, Black Friday has forced me to get back into full-time lawyering. I'm thankful I've got that to fall back on but I have to admit it's just not as much fun. Seriously, give me being one-outed on the river any day. Please.
Remind me of that when they get the pipeline open again.
Until then, it's back to Vernon's and Lexis for me. In the meantime, I hope you're able to play. And if you are, thank your lucky stars and run good, amigos.
At Least One Response to Doing Something...
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Saturday, April 16, 2011
Whistling Past the Graveyard
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around in the US, exploiting opt out clauses in the Act, simply beggars belief.
Took awhile, but looks like they were right. Check out Humphrey's wesbite.
From *October 2006* in response to the UIGEA (as found on poker playing attorney Chuck Humphrey's website):
"The notion that a number of the leading companies, may then decide to hang"It is now widely believed that when the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006 is signed into law, all but the most cavalier of online operators will stop accepting bets from US citizens.
around in the US, exploiting opt out clauses in the Act, simply beggars belief.
"Until the climate changes, the best advice would be to give the US a wide bearth once and for all. To do otherwise would be to antagonise the US authorities, and to further increase the risk of arrest. And that is something that beleagured ordinary investors can live without."Jeff Simpson, the business editor of the Las Vegas Sun expressed this conclusion: [I]f the poker community keeps whistling past the graveyard, pretending that there's nothing wrong with flouting the law in pursuit of easy money, even tougher crackdowns are ahead.
Took awhile, but looks like they were right. Check out Humphrey's wesbite.
Drove my Chevy to the Levy [sic]...
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It was after two CST. I'd just doubled up in a 6-max ring game on Stars (really, I did). Having done that, it was time to protect the BR and move on. I searched the lobby, found a juicy game, and clicked to sit down.
As I was contemplating life without on-line poker, I got really irritated. I live in Texas...the birthplace of Texas Hold 'em (I don't know if this is factual, but I'm going with it - Doyle's from Texas and he's the Godfather of Poker, so that's good enough for me)...and after today I now have to catch a plane or drive several hours to play (unless I'm willing to risk the home games). That makes absolutely no sense given that Texas is the second-largest U.S. state by both area and population, and the largest state in the Union.
I am not a gaming attorney and I do not know the UIGEA like the back of my hand, so there is nothing black letter law legal or authoritative about what I'm about to say. All I know is that after all this went down, all I could think about is liberty and the right of privacy and what the laws regarding gambling are in my state. I cannot speak to the legal issue of how the internet and social media impacts and colors the constitutionally protected right of privacy, but what I could do was a little research.
A few years ago in Texas, a big case made news. At issue was "whether petitioners were free as adults to engage in private conduct in the exercise of their liberty under the Due Process Clause" (paraphrased, whether a Texas statute making it illegal for two men to get it on in the privacy of their own home was constitutional).
Ultimately, the Court protected the right of people to be able to "engage in private conduct without government intervention," finding that the Texas statute at issue did nothing to further any "legitimate state interest which can justify its intrusion into the individual’s personal and private life." Fortunately, the Supremes got this one right in Lawrence v. Texas.
I like that case for a lot of different reasons, but mainly because I like to think that what we do in the privacy of our own homes is protected (yes, I am assuming for the sake of argument that people are good and decent and not abusing their kids, building meth labs, etc etc).
And that lead me, immediately (obviously...Lawrence was all about sex, people), to thinking about how I could legally sit in front of my computer, whip out my credit card, transfer some money via the airwaves, and download a bunch of pron, even if I were underage. But I can't do the same to play poker, a game of skill. I compare the two not really for legal argument but because people often think of pornography and "gambling" as vices.
Here's what the Texas Penal Code says about gambling:
My, admittedly, limited understanding of the UIGEA is that it "prohibits gambling businesses from knowingly accepting payments in connection with the participation of another person in a bet or wager that involves the use of the Internet and that is unlawful under any federal or state law." I know there are a lot of loopholes here that I'm not addressing (because I don't know what they are and because I'm really tired), but if I'm playing poker in my own home or office (private places) and I'm not receiving anything but my own personal winnings (if any - ha!), and I'm playing against others who, like me, all share the same risk of losing and chance of winning and I can do that live, then I should be able to do that via the internet and the government should butt the hell out. If they're not going to do that, then they need to get their act together and regulate it properly (and reap the benefits through taxation that will occur).
In reality, there's nothing of legal substance to any of my thoughts here. I'm just ruminating on the hypocrisy of the laws in this country and am mad, and sad, because today's actions have so badly hindered my ability to do something that I love. I can only imagine how the poor guys and gals who make their living via on-line poker (whether as players or as employees in the industry) are feeling. I feel for you.
I agree with some of the bullets Paul Harris has on his blog. He's right - poker's not dead, but things are going to change. Since that's the case, why not have a voice in what those changes might be? If there was ever a time for poker to band together in a grassroots fashion, it's now. If the PPA is the voice for the poker player (and if they're not, who/what is??), then they need to come out with a Call to Action and we as players need to support it in word and deed and dollar.
If nothing else, please do this - tweet your representatives and let them know something's got to be done.
Sigh. Good luck at the tables, peeps.
---------------------------------
I can’t remember if I cried
When I read about his widowed bride,
But something touched me deep inside
The day the music died.
So bye-bye, Miss American pie.
Drove my chevy to the levee,
But the levee was dry.
And them good old boys were drinkin’ whiskey and rye
Singin’, "this’ll be the day that I die.
"this’ll be the day that I die."
When I read about his widowed bride,
But something touched me deep inside
The day the music died.
So bye-bye, Miss American pie.
Drove my chevy to the levee,
But the levee was dry.
And them good old boys were drinkin’ whiskey and rye
Singin’, "this’ll be the day that I die.
"this’ll be the day that I die."
-- Don McLean, "American Pie"
It was after two CST. I'd just doubled up in a 6-max ring game on Stars (really, I did). Having done that, it was time to protect the BR and move on. I searched the lobby, found a juicy game, and clicked to sit down.
I thought it was a glitch. But after a couple more attempts, I went straight to Twitter. And that's when I finally began getting the picture. Others have outlined in better detail what's happened (see cliffs here via @Scarlet_LV and more here and here), but no one really knows yet what it means.
I am not a gaming attorney and I do not know the UIGEA like the back of my hand, so there is nothing black letter law legal or authoritative about what I'm about to say. All I know is that after all this went down, all I could think about is liberty and the right of privacy and what the laws regarding gambling are in my state. I cannot speak to the legal issue of how the internet and social media impacts and colors the constitutionally protected right of privacy, but what I could do was a little research.
A few years ago in Texas, a big case made news. At issue was "whether petitioners were free as adults to engage in private conduct in the exercise of their liberty under the Due Process Clause" (paraphrased, whether a Texas statute making it illegal for two men to get it on in the privacy of their own home was constitutional).
Ultimately, the Court protected the right of people to be able to "engage in private conduct without government intervention," finding that the Texas statute at issue did nothing to further any "legitimate state interest which can justify its intrusion into the individual’s personal and private life." Fortunately, the Supremes got this one right in Lawrence v. Texas.
I like that case for a lot of different reasons, but mainly because I like to think that what we do in the privacy of our own homes is protected (yes, I am assuming for the sake of argument that people are good and decent and not abusing their kids, building meth labs, etc etc).
And that lead me, immediately (obviously...Lawrence was all about sex, people), to thinking about how I could legally sit in front of my computer, whip out my credit card, transfer some money via the airwaves, and download a bunch of pron, even if I were underage. But I can't do the same to play poker, a game of skill. I compare the two not really for legal argument but because people often think of pornography and "gambling" as vices.
Here's what the Texas Penal Code says about gambling:
Sec. 47.02. GAMBLING.(a) A person commits an offense if he:(1) makes a bet on the partial or final result of a game or contest or on the performance of a participant in a game or contest;(2) makes a bet on the result of any political nomination, appointment, or election or on the degree of success of any nominee, appointee, or candidate; or(3) plays and bets for money or other thing of value at any game played with cards, dice, balls, or any other gambling device.(b) It is a defense to prosecution under this section that:(1) the actor engaged in gambling in a private place;(2) no person received any economic benefit other than personal winnings; and(3) except for the advantage of skill or luck, the risks of losing and the chances of winning were the same for all participants.
My, admittedly, limited understanding of the UIGEA is that it "prohibits gambling businesses from knowingly accepting payments in connection with the participation of another person in a bet or wager that involves the use of the Internet and that is unlawful under any federal or state law." I know there are a lot of loopholes here that I'm not addressing (because I don't know what they are and because I'm really tired), but if I'm playing poker in my own home or office (private places) and I'm not receiving anything but my own personal winnings (if any - ha!), and I'm playing against others who, like me, all share the same risk of losing and chance of winning and I can do that live, then I should be able to do that via the internet and the government should butt the hell out. If they're not going to do that, then they need to get their act together and regulate it properly (and reap the benefits through taxation that will occur).
In reality, there's nothing of legal substance to any of my thoughts here. I'm just ruminating on the hypocrisy of the laws in this country and am mad, and sad, because today's actions have so badly hindered my ability to do something that I love. I can only imagine how the poor guys and gals who make their living via on-line poker (whether as players or as employees in the industry) are feeling. I feel for you.
I agree with some of the bullets Paul Harris has on his blog. He's right - poker's not dead, but things are going to change. Since that's the case, why not have a voice in what those changes might be? If there was ever a time for poker to band together in a grassroots fashion, it's now. If the PPA is the voice for the poker player (and if they're not, who/what is??), then they need to come out with a Call to Action and we as players need to support it in word and deed and dollar.
If nothing else, please do this - tweet your representatives and let them know something's got to be done.
Sigh. Good luck at the tables, peeps.
---------------------------------
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Tuesday, January 11, 2011
Technology
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I sent 2 tweets and answered three emails before I rolled out of bed this morning...before the alarm even went off, actually. Squinting my eyes from the glare of the iPad, I continued scrolling through my timeline...and ran across this Wall Street Journal Article. Just a few days ago, I'd read another interesting article about cyberspace (when you're dead) in the New York Times (both of which I believe were tweeted by the ever-wonderful @nikiblack).
I spend a lot of time online. For work and for fun, but especially when I'm playing poker. While playing, I generally have twitter up in the background, music playing through iTunes, an iPad for email, and my BlackBerry for calls. I generally don't have the TV on, but...sometimes I do. That is a lot of distraction and a lot of multi-tasking (which, of course, is detrimental to playing solid poker). And when I'm not in front of a computer, I'm never without access because I'm never without my BlackBerry.
While in Germany for 16 days, we had very little access to the internet and because I was unsure of the roaming costs, I completely shut down my BlackBerry. In addition to all the sights I was able to see while there, I read four books, played a bunch of charades, enjoyed a great family viewing of The Sound of Music, and just generally reconnected with reality and the truly meaningful loves in my life.
I find myself questioning technology and these articles that recommend "detoxing" or/and logging off. On one hand, I recognize the all-consuming time suck that such technology can be. I can spend an hour going off on a Google search tangent or playing on YouTube. And Lord knows I know how much of an effort (read - time waste) it can be to create an award winning State video (I Haz Chips, anyone?).
On the other hand, this technology is a part of our lives. It's not going anywhere. Indeed, 8% of internet users are Twitter users; and, as intimated in this Pew report, Twitter usage has risen 18% between 2008 through 2010. I guarantee that number will rise in the coming years. (For me, twitter is where I spend the vast majority of my online time. While I have a FB account, I very rarely post things on it and very rarely use it to keep up with friends - I do that in "real" life...and via twitter - ack!)
I certainly understand the need to stay grounded in reality by logging off and going tech-free. At the same time, this technology IS reality in that it is and has become a part of our every day lives. While one could log-off and go all luddite, the fact remains that, for most of us (at least everyone I know), technology is necessary. Sure, you could send snail mail letters and/or conduct business solely in person or on a rotary dial telephone...but, who would your clients be? And how would you get them? And what exactly would your business be?
Do you see my point?
And every technology we have now will either be obsolete or completely different for our children. I can't even begin to imagine what things will look like twenty years from now.
I guess my issue is the feeling that "logging-off" or "detoxing" from technology kind of misses the point. It's kind of like drugs or alcohol...if you have to "detox" from it, then that implies there's a problem or that you're using it wrong. Like alcohol (and drugs), all this technology is not going anywhere. Since that's the case, rather than eschewing what is reality, find the middle ground for you.
There's always something to work on, isn't there? Then again, maybe I'm just an addict. What do you think (rhetorical question - what do you think about technology, detoxing, etc. As always, I'm interested in your thoughts)? Don't answer that, Mom.
-----
I sent 2 tweets and answered three emails before I rolled out of bed this morning...before the alarm even went off, actually. Squinting my eyes from the glare of the iPad, I continued scrolling through my timeline...and ran across this Wall Street Journal Article. Just a few days ago, I'd read another interesting article about cyberspace (when you're dead) in the New York Times (both of which I believe were tweeted by the ever-wonderful @nikiblack).
I spend a lot of time online. For work and for fun, but especially when I'm playing poker. While playing, I generally have twitter up in the background, music playing through iTunes, an iPad for email, and my BlackBerry for calls. I generally don't have the TV on, but...sometimes I do. That is a lot of distraction and a lot of multi-tasking (which, of course, is detrimental to playing solid poker). And when I'm not in front of a computer, I'm never without access because I'm never without my BlackBerry.
While in Germany for 16 days, we had very little access to the internet and because I was unsure of the roaming costs, I completely shut down my BlackBerry. In addition to all the sights I was able to see while there, I read four books, played a bunch of charades, enjoyed a great family viewing of The Sound of Music, and just generally reconnected with reality and the truly meaningful loves in my life.
I find myself questioning technology and these articles that recommend "detoxing" or/and logging off. On one hand, I recognize the all-consuming time suck that such technology can be. I can spend an hour going off on a Google search tangent or playing on YouTube. And Lord knows I know how much of an effort (read - time waste) it can be to create an award winning State video (I Haz Chips, anyone?).
On the other hand, this technology is a part of our lives. It's not going anywhere. Indeed, 8% of internet users are Twitter users; and, as intimated in this Pew report, Twitter usage has risen 18% between 2008 through 2010. I guarantee that number will rise in the coming years. (For me, twitter is where I spend the vast majority of my online time. While I have a FB account, I very rarely post things on it and very rarely use it to keep up with friends - I do that in "real" life...and via twitter - ack!)
I certainly understand the need to stay grounded in reality by logging off and going tech-free. At the same time, this technology IS reality in that it is and has become a part of our every day lives. While one could log-off and go all luddite, the fact remains that, for most of us (at least everyone I know), technology is necessary. Sure, you could send snail mail letters and/or conduct business solely in person or on a rotary dial telephone...but, who would your clients be? And how would you get them? And what exactly would your business be?
Do you see my point?
And every technology we have now will either be obsolete or completely different for our children. I can't even begin to imagine what things will look like twenty years from now.
I guess my issue is the feeling that "logging-off" or "detoxing" from technology kind of misses the point. It's kind of like drugs or alcohol...if you have to "detox" from it, then that implies there's a problem or that you're using it wrong. Like alcohol (and drugs), all this technology is not going anywhere. Since that's the case, rather than eschewing what is reality, find the middle ground for you.
There's always something to work on, isn't there? Then again, maybe I'm just an addict. What do you think (rhetorical question - what do you think about technology, detoxing, etc. As always, I'm interested in your thoughts)? Don't answer that, Mom.
-----
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
The Fate of Online Poker...uh...still up in the air
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UPDATE #1 - nevermind...for now?
--------
UPDATE #2 (7:04pm CST) - Per Scarlet, expect it to live or die by week's end...follow her to stay informed.
-------
I tried my hand at poker animation and it failed miserably next to these guys. Given my usual poker hand, that was standard, obv.
I direct you to that link in the hopes it will alleviate some of the wailing and gnashing of teeth that seems to be occurring as we wait and see what's going to happen to online poker (did you know when you Google 'online poker' Doyle's Room comes up first? Wow...seo).
So. Is the gnashing and wailing well founded? Are recent events converging to deprive me of my own Mega Million poker (pipe) dream? Shut up. I already know Harry Reid's the least of my problems.
Rather than try to add my harebrained take on things, I'll point you to those that are doing it well:
F-Train has read, re-read, redlined, outlined, and lawyerized the regs and digested them into enjoyable bite sized morsels of poker info goodness.
Scarlet_lv has created a terrific hotlist for all things related to the Reid Bill, otherwise known as PIGIPRSUA, or 'piggiewannasignew' for stupid inside joke shorter.
Stuart Hoegner, of course, is always a dapper font of information, man.
The Poker Players Alliance is recommending players get involved by calling 202-224-3121 and letting your Senator know you support poker.
And of course, folks on the forums and the twitters have very interesting and sometimes very educated viewpoints on the subject. There are also many other sources for info, most of which Scarlet has on her hotlist, so I apologize for not specifically including everyone here but she and Pokerati have got 'em there.
Enter the discussion!
I want to hear from some of you serious online bankrolled phenoms...are you withdrawing your funds already? Making plans to do so soon? Watching and waiting?
Fingers crossed and good luck at the tables, peeps.
UPDATE #1 - nevermind...for now?
--------
UPDATE #2 (7:04pm CST) - Per Scarlet, expect it to live or die by week's end...follow her to stay informed.
-------
I tried my hand at poker animation and it failed miserably next to these guys. Given my usual poker hand, that was standard, obv.
I direct you to that link in the hopes it will alleviate some of the wailing and gnashing of teeth that seems to be occurring as we wait and see what's going to happen to online poker (did you know when you Google 'online poker' Doyle's Room comes up first? Wow...seo).
So. Is the gnashing and wailing well founded? Are recent events converging to deprive me of my own Mega Million poker (pipe) dream? Shut up. I already know Harry Reid's the least of my problems.
Rather than try to add my harebrained take on things, I'll point you to those that are doing it well:
F-Train has read, re-read, redlined, outlined, and lawyerized the regs and digested them into enjoyable bite sized morsels of poker info goodness.
Scarlet_lv has created a terrific hotlist for all things related to the Reid Bill, otherwise known as PIGIPRSUA, or 'piggiewannasignew' for stupid inside joke shorter.
Stuart Hoegner, of course, is always a dapper font of information, man.
The Poker Players Alliance is recommending players get involved by calling 202-224-3121 and letting your Senator know you support poker.
And of course, folks on the forums and the twitters have very interesting and sometimes very educated viewpoints on the subject. There are also many other sources for info, most of which Scarlet has on her hotlist, so I apologize for not specifically including everyone here but she and Pokerati have got 'em there.
Enter the discussion!
I want to hear from some of you serious online bankrolled phenoms...are you withdrawing your funds already? Making plans to do so soon? Watching and waiting?
Fingers crossed and good luck at the tables, peeps.
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