The conflict between CS: GO skin gambling websites continues to be exposed.
Last night, CSGOEmpire accused CSGOWild of ‘manipulating’ their provably fair system and the bots on the website. Akke, a user related to Empire, collected a lot of images in a tweet accusing Wild bots of biasing results in CSGOWild for profit. Wild denied the allegation the next morning.
Following the accusations on Twitter, Wild gave a statement, saying that there was a “mysterious account” that had access to the website’s system and could see the provably fair algorithm directly. CSGOWild said this allegation of ‘manipulation’ was partly due to a ‘loose’ data security system during data transfer.
After Akke’s tweet, a lot of third parties were also involved in this issue. CS:GO YouTuber Anomaly has delete video his recent gambling. Trilluxe, another CS:GO YouTuber, posted Photo he declined sponsorship from Wild, saying it was his “final right decision in 2017”. Skinhub, another crate opening page, also brief explanation about server hashing and server seeding to protect CSGOWild.
In addition, Akke also points to names and websites where the provably fair system is not reliable, such as PhantomL0rd, EZSkins, and CSGOShuffle. PhantomL0rd was involved in the CSGOShuffle scandal that was exposed by Richard Lewis in a YouTube video in July 2016.
This case is about CS:GO skin gambling websites that have been involved in the unethical actions of website owners since the CSGOLotto scandal. The previous owners of CSGOLotto, Trevor “TmarTn” Martin and Thomas “Syndicate” Cassell, worked with the US Federal Trade Commission on the issue of false advertising of the website on social media.
Source link: CS:GO skin gambling websites are controversial because the system is ‘manipulated’
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