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Excellently insightful as always, Ed Miller posted an excellent piece on the Neteller situation and the danger that has always been inherent with online poker that many don't see. I recall distinctly when I started playing on Pokerroom in 2001, and then again Pacific a year or so later, that it was extremely important for me to be playing not on my preexisting bankroll, but with a new bankroll won on that site. I still try to follow this rule, whereby I attempt to cashout my initial investment as quickly as possible. In this way, I can view any collapse or inability to pay as merely wasted time, not wasted bankroll.
I've modified that somewhat since buying in became difficult; I'm keeping more in online poker accounts than I used to, due to fear that I can't buy in again if it falls. That is probably a mistake, because the trustworthiness of online balances is actually most in question. Miller's right that an online version of the proverbial 1929 “run on the bank” could cause a serious collapse due to cashflow problems.
The most important thing for all of us to do — particularly those
of us that receive a serious portion of our real income from online
poker — is, in the words of Douglas Adams: Don't
Panic. Keep playing your usual games. Do your usual
cashouts. We all know we'll see a steady slowdown in the action, and
eventually the games will move towards empty as the USA players
disappear. But, online poker isn't changing much outside the USA. I
hope my non-USA friends can comment, but I bet the feeling outside the
USA is these silly USAmericans, always with their morality-oriented
legislation. We'll keep doing what we're doing and forget them and
their idiot president
. If that's the sentiment, which I hope it
is, that's the right one. The USA is an important market, but it's
not the center of the universe.
I expect I have lots of online poker in my immediate future, and lots of live poker in my medium-term future, which just can't get the EV pumping the way my current online work can. But, I'm happy to let the online scene wind down gracefully around me, and then make my decisions based on what the post-UIGEA and post-Neteller-arrests world looks like. I hope everyone else will do the same. Keep your heads cool; let's all put our chips in, take a flop, and see how this hand plays out.
Update: I forgot to put this link into the slashdot story on the Neteller arrests. Like all slashdot, there are a very few excellent comments and lots of useless ones. Here's a particularly interesting one from a former Neteller employee.
It's Different in Australia
Date: 2010-09-27 07:38 (UTC)