New Blackjack Ballroom slot turning heads

Posted under Uncategorized by admin on Tuesday 22 September 2009 at 10:55 pm

With on average 3 high quality casino games released every month at BlackjackBallroom, games developer Microgaming is helping to create a very loyal player base for the popular online casino.

For fans of online blackjack, poker, roulette and slots, the regular influx of new games means a whole host of entertaining ways to win money online. There is a beautifully designed online slot for every taste imaginable, keeping gameplay at BlackjackBallroom.com fresh, original and for some lucky players, very profitable.

This month sees the release of Wealth Spa, a cheeky 5 reel, 20 pay-line video slot which is themed on an exclusive spa resort. Players earn gold tokens through a thrilling mix of Wilds, Multipliers and Scatters - the more tokens, the better the bonus possibilities. A rewarding new multi-bonus opportunity which players can take at any time during the game, opens up a series of five different bonuses, each with its own entertaining choice of potential rewards.

From virtual hot stone massages to a hot wax treatment, the graphics are sexy and sophisticated, treating the player to a roller coaster ride of relaxation to excitement and back! Infact, the gameplay is so smooth and entertaining that the player would be forgiven for getting carried away in the moment and forgetting the possibility of winning huge cash prizes.

Wealth Spa represents a new and very entertaining slot experience with a good range of betting options from as low as 0.01 to 0.25 a line. Playing maximum bet, the base game can deliver rewards up to 12,500.00, and the bonuses provide a slew of extra earnings ranging from 2,800.00 to 25,000.00.

With much more than just free online blackjack, BlackjackBallroom.com gives all new players the chance to use $500 of the casino’s money to play any of the 320+ Las Vegas style online games absolutely free for one hour. Any money that the player wins can be used after the free hour, with the luckiest players hitting the jackpot without having wagered a penny of their own! In 2008, Klaus E from Finland hit the $5.5 million Mega Moolah jackpot after placing a 0.50 cent bet at BlackjackBallroom.com, proving if proof were needed that small bets really can win big.


Casino Rewards has big weekend

Posted under Uncategorized by admin on Tuesday 22 September 2009 at 10:54 pm

The two popular Casino Rewards online casinos that can be found in the free play section at Secret Casino Club, GoldenTigerCasino and CasinoAction have become well known in the online casino community for huge, regular payouts and the interested free play promotions that allow players to enjoy the casino games for free before staking any real money.

The two popular Casino Rewards online casinos that can be found in the free play section at Secret Casino Club, GoldenTigerCasino and CasinoAction have become well known in the online casino community for huge, regular payouts and the interested free play promotions that allow players to enjoy the casino games for free before staking any real money.

Last weekend, one slot machine paid out two jackpots in the space of just 2 hours at these well known casinos.

Maria S from Portugal hit the $56,650 jackpot and Robert M from Norway won an incredible $97,419 on the popular online progressive slot Treasure Nile.

Treasure Nile is a five reel, nine payline online slot in the theme of ancient Egypt. The nature of the progressive jackpot means that with each bet a player makes, a portion of the bet is contributed to the jackpot total, meaning an ever-growing kitty ready to be won by one lucky player… or in this case, two!

The European online casino CasinoAction has been in the news regularly for large jackpot wins. In June 2009, a new player from the Netherlands netted a cool half a million Dollars playing online roulette after having deposited only $40 of his own money!

For a limited time only, CasinoAction is welcoming new players with a massive $1250 for free to use for one hour on a selection of their award winning games, with money left over after the hour carried through to the real casino.

Treasure NileEffectively, this gives the user a risk-free opportunity to not only test the online casino games, but also to build up more free money to use as a head start in the real casino after the complimentary one hour expires, to play any game from the entire selection and aim for the huge jackpots on offer.

Currently the total of jackpots on offer at CasinoAction is an incredible $2.4 million and rising every second.


California tribes to add slots

Posted under Uncategorized by admin on Tuesday 22 September 2009 at 10:53 pm

California’s slot machine market is about to get bigger.

A federal judge in Sacramento has ruled the state’s Indian onlines casinos can add 10,549 slot machines to a jurisdiction that is now approved for more than 83,000 games, the largest Indian gaming market in the United States.

By comparison, Nevada has 194,180 total slot machines in casinos and other locations, including bars, taverns and supermarkets.

Wall Street saw the news as another positive catalyst for Nevada’s slot machine industry, which has been seeking any signs of potential sales opportunities after several years of dwindling revenues and earnings.

“We continue to believe the equipment manufacturers are the way to play the gaming group,” Janney Montgomery Scott gaming analyst Brian McGill advised investors. “In addition to the potential new gaming machines in California, we see 55,000 games as likely over the next two years.”

McGill said slot machine expansions are expected to take place over the next two years in Illinois, Kansas, Maryland, Ohio and Pennsylvania.

The California expansion news on Wednesday came as a surprise.

The order stemmed from a federal lawsuit filed by two tribes against the state and California’s Gambling Control Commission. The tribes claimed the state miscalculated the formulas used to allot licenses for slot machines.

U.S. District Judge Frank Damrell Jr., agreed with the Indian casino operators and said the state has 45 days to divvy up the slot machines among 55 tribes, although the state may appeal the ruling to the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals.

In a statement, Morris Reid, chairman of the Picayune Rancheria of Chukchansi Indians near Fresno, one of the tribes that filed the lawsuit, said California lost some $30 million in potential tax revenues because the slot machines had been denied to the casinos.

“This is a great win for all of Indian Country,” Reid said.

Bally Technologies Chief Operating Officer Gavin Issacs said: “California is a great market for us and its one of those markets where (all the slot machine makers) do equally well. This is an opportunity we are very happy about.”

When California’s original Indian casino act was approved 10 years ago, tribes were allotted 2,000 slot machines apiece. In recent years, several tribes negotiated new compacts with the state, agreeing to pay higher gaming taxes in exchange for additional slot machines.

At the end of 2007, California’s 60 Indian casinos operated 66,115 slot machines according to Casino City’s Indian Gaming Industry Report. In February 2008, California voters approved a ballot measure allowing the state’s four largest Indian casinos to add up to 17,000 slot machines.

Because Indian casinos report numbers privately, it’s unclear how many of the games have been added since the vote took place.

Analysts said that if all of the 10,549 potential machines are added in California, the sales could be worth anywhere between 7 cents per share and 17 cents per share for each of Nevada’s gaming equipment manufacturers.


December 1st final implementation date could see an abundance of confused overblocking

Posted under Uncategorized by admin on Monday 7 September 2009 at 9:32 pm

With 2009 entering its last quarter, reports are surfacing that some online casinos and US banks are already starting to gear up for the implementation of the Unlawful internet gambling enforcement Act regulations on December 1st.

Even at this early stage, the reports indicate an unfamiliarity with the law, which many have previously criticised has imprecise, that may lead to banks being overly zealous in blocking financial transactions with online gambling companies. Earlier this year at least two state lotteries - exempt from federal anti-gambling laws - complained about banks imposing blocks that were not justified on certain transactions.

Poker News Daily reports that Nevada State Bank recently mailed customers advising: “In compliance with the U.S. Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act, we are required to notify you that you are prohibited from processing transactions derived from Internet bets or wagers where such bet or wager is unlawful under any applicable Federal or State law.”

PND correctly points out that it is debatable whether any federal law makes the playing of Internet poker illegal - an issue that legislators and enforcers have shown a reluctance to address in court. It also questions the wording, emphasising that the UIGEA applies only to deposits sent to Internet gambling sites, not to withdrawals made from the site to a bank.

California Bank & Trust appeared to similarly confused, advising customers that it “will not process transactions derived from Internet bets or wagers.” More can be expected, given that the banks both belong to the Zions Bancorporation, a holding company based in Salt Lake City that oversees eight banks in eight states: Nevada, California, Arizona, Texas, Oregon, Washington, Colorado and Utah.

“The problem is that banks will have every right to overblock to make sure they comply with the UIGEA,” PND accurately observes - the UIGEA gives them an out in cases of erroneous blocks.

Time is running out for the best immediate hope of fighting the UIGEA and eventually relegating it to the scrapheap - Barney Frank’s Reasonable Prudence in Regulation Act seeking to postpone the implementation of UIGEA by a year to allow his HR2267 proposal to regulate and license online gambling in the United States to be debated.

The “Reasonable Prudence” bill has yet to exit Frank’s House Financial Services Committee although it has already attracted 34 co-sponsors.


Aussie speculation swirls around new e-cash processor

Posted under Uncategorized by admin on Monday 7 September 2009 at 9:30 pm

Speculation and rumour of a new casino games start for a failed e-cash executive that have swirled around Australian financial circles recently were given form in an online casinos article by eCommerce Report this week.

The report centres on a new casino games entity called Payovation.com, which has been alleged in some quarters to be Daniel Tzvetkoff’s and Sam Sciacca’s Intabill “risen from the dead”.

Our readers will recall that Intabill, headed by the youthful and high profile Tzvetkoff, failed earlier this year on claims that it was the victim of global economic recession. The failure has reportedly triggered multi-million dollar legal claims - one allegedly from Tzvetkoff’s former partner Sciacca - and the loss of both money and jobs to clients that include large online gambling companies and employees of the now defunct company.

In an article headed “Intabill rises again as Payovation”, eCommerce Report reveals that the former Brisbane-based Intabill appears to have risen from the dead, although its former clients are unlikely to benefit as Payovation (Pty) Ltd will probably not be helping them to retrieve the millions that Intabill owed when it went under.

The eCommerce report refers to online forum postings allegedly made by Payovation CEO, Michael Hui, claiming that none of Intabill’s founders, shareholders or directors are involved with Payovation.

“It has been suggested on this forum that we are just Intabill with a different name. This is not the case. Payovation is a new and separate business from Intabill. None of the founders, shareholders or directors of Intabill are founders, shareholders, directors or employees of Payovation,” the chief of the new company is alleged to have posted.

“We have no relationship with Intabill other than our purchase of some of Intabill’s intellectual property for a considerable sum of money. ”

eCommerce Report points out, however, that the reality is that both Hui and many of those working at Payovation previously worked at Intabill - something that Hui’s posting acknowledges.

“We can empathise with many of you given that many of us lost our jobs and money in Intabill’s downfall, “ Hui apparently posted.

eCommerce observes: “Even so, it seems clear that Hui and his Payovation team were actively preparing to take over and re-launch the Intabill business under a new name in the final weeks of the company’s existence.”

It goes on to quote further from Hui’s posts:

“As it became clear to us that Intabill was experiencing financial difficulties, we met with an Australian investor who agreed to financially back our plans to acquire the Intabill processing software. Following weeks of negotiations, the deal was struck to purchase some of Intabill’s intellectual property.”

The article speculates that the assets Payovation bought may have included Intabill’s customer database, supporting this with the news that Hui has been emailing Intabill’s former customers, and indeed claims to have already signed up many of them.

Apparently confirming this, Hui said in his posting that: “We have offered to Intabill’s previous merchants to take over their processing and many have accepted.”

Details of Hui’s email offer to Intabill merchants had been previously published on the same online forum.

eCommerce republished the contents of Hui’s email to merchants:

“I am pleased to inform you that on July 7 2009, prior to Intabill entering into administration, Payovation purchased all core Intellectual Property from Intabill, allowing for a smooth and seamless transition of their processing platform and all merchant accounts into our care and control. Payovation is an international payment gateway and processor, providing highly reliable merchant services to merchants around the world. Payovation brings an experienced team of senior management with many years of processing experience to ensure a smooth, seamless and profitable future for all of its clients and customers. Please be assured that your existing Intabill merchant account will continue to operate under Payovation without interruption or change.”

Unfortunately it appears that as at publication date eCommerce had been unable to contact Hui to confirm the accuracy of the online forum postings. However, the publication reports that it has been able to confirm that “Hui was, up until around 18 months ago, an associate at a Brisbane law firm – Sciaccas.”

Further enquiries revealed that Intabill director Sam (Salvatore) Sciacca is not currently an employee there.

“Sam Sciacca was one of the two directors of BT Projects Pty Ltd – the company that traded in Australia as Intabill. The other director was Daniel Tzvetkoff,” eCommerce Report claims.

The article links to previous stories on Intabill, revealing that in June this year the Brisbane Courier Mail, suggested that the amount being claimed in a court action following the Intabill failure is $52 million, comprised of $43 million in outstanding payments, and accrued interest.

“The Courier-Mail said the court action had begun on the 25th of May and was initiated by Kolyma Corporation AVV, said to be the owner of the world’s second most popular poker site Full Tilt.

“Reportedly, the court action names both Intabill and its two principals, Daniel Tzvetkoff and Con Sciacca as respondents.

“More precisely, as Intabill is, formally, a foreign company, being incorporated in the British Virgin Islands, the court action names as respondent a company known as BT Projects Pty Ltd.

“BT Projects is thought to be the Australian company that facilitates the operations of Intabill’s Brisbane administrative headquarters. Australian Casino News reports that Tzvetkoff and Sciacca are co-directors of BT Projects Pty Ltd, along with Canadian company - Rendel Investments.”


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