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April 6, 2006 at 5:46 pm #688105
Anonymous
InactiveNo comments?
I would have thought a lot of these programs (and any future ones) would be pretty upset with this kind of scam affiliate marketing.
100’s or even 1000’s of students learning exactly how to abuse casinos, with unlimited help from the affiliate is a pretty worrying prospect….
April 7, 2006 at 6:14 pm #688190Anonymous
InactiveDepends if the affiliate is on CPA or MGR. Perhaps he has approval of these programs, and is working on MGR plan. It only takes one gambler to offset a few dozen “perfect gamblers” and make both the casino and the affiliate profitable.
April 7, 2006 at 11:03 pm #688218Anonymous
InactiveWell I waded through the site (chose the not a uni student option) and i didn’t see anything ground breaking.
It certainly did not appear to me to give a magic formula to untold riches. I particularly like the “learn to play blackjack = 10 minutes” step. Absolutely. But learning to play it well takes a lot longer.
:blush:April 12, 2006 at 12:20 am #688523Anonymous
InactiveAnyone who makes good money in casinos knows to go for rev share
Encouraging bonus hunting is just a waste of time – granted the guy may be on CPA but his affiliate managers must surely intervene once they realise the all his players are worthless.
If it ever got out of hand all that would happen is the UK would get added to the list of countires which have to wager double the normal amount to qualify for a bonus.
on a side point – the new UK laws may restrict this kind of bonus advertising anyway
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