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Failed gaming site cost $7.3 million: minister
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By: ctvbc.ca
Date: Thursday Jul. 22, 2010 5:19 PM PT
The cost of PlayNow.com, a high-profile gambling website that turned into a high-profile flop, was budgeted at $7.3 million dollars, the province's gaming minister told CTV News.
But Minister Rich Coleman said that some of that money could be returned to taxpayers if the province finds the company contracted to create the site, OpenBet, failed to live up to terms in its contract.
"In this case, it didn't work. It's embarrassing for everyone, including the minister," Coleman told a scrum outside an unrelated press conference.
"(The company) has a contract with us to perform," Coleman said. "We have expectations that if someone provides a service that isn't complete we'll go back at them."
When it was launched last week, PlayNow.com was meant to be a legal alternative to an illegal gambling industry that sucks $100 million out of British Columbia each year. Coleman confirmed today that the budgeted cost was $7.3 million.
Within hours, it was shut down. The B.C. Lottery Corporation initially said that the site was overwhelmed by traffic when it collapsed hours after its glitzy launch from a Granville Island theatre.
Then on Tuesday BCLC admitted that it knew as early as Friday that 134 accounts had sensitive personal information viewed by another user. Some 12 accounts had financial information revealed.
At the same time, a number of users were able to gamble with some $8,000 of other users' money.
Right now, engineers from British company OpenBet are going through the code line by line, and officials have promised several security checks and privacy checks before the website goes back online.
BCLC maintains that the glitches happened because too many people wanted to gamble, but computer expert Rui Pereira isn't so sure.
"It wouldn't be consistent and long-term enough for me to gamble with other people's money," Pereira said.
He says he thinks that the "session data crossover" was instead caused by a structural problem with the coding, pointing to a website posting that said, "There's no such thing as a data crossover. There is such a thing as a poorly programmed and insufficiently tested application."
He said an application development platform named WebSphere has a simple setting that would have caught a session data crossover before gamblers' money was put at risk.
"It essentially is a free switch they could have turned on with a slight loss of performance," he said.
But now that the website is down, there's no easy fix.
"It is an effort. It isn't simply a case of doing it over a weekend. It can take months," Pereira said.
With a report from CTV British Columbia's Jon Woodward
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more crap, from the same bunch of crap, geez, when can we get rid of these clowns??? please. rcmp, pull your collective heads out of your ass and put these criminals in jail. we want our rights protected. when is it going to happen?? |
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We should be more concerned with the mind boggling incompetence that resulted in the considerable fine from FINTRAC . It is quite clear that from the top down the lottery corp is staffed by folk who do not perform their duties in a credible way . Reporting out of a data base in a format acceptable to the banks , CRA or IRS is a fairly simple matter . That BC Lotteries is incapable of performing these simple basic acts is affirmation that there needs to be a wholesale house cleaning .Lets start with Mr. Graydon and work our way down until the incompetence stops . There are qualified people in this province who would be delighted to work for the generous pay packages these fools collect . |
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Today I had to pay $38 to duplicate the tickets that I already have in the Playnow system. In a telephone conversation, this was the advice given to me last evening by BCLC. Will someone from BCLC please let me know if that money will be reimbursed to me. In reality, BCLC is hitting me twice for the same numbers on two sets of tickets. This type of double dipping on the part of BCLC should very quickly cover any of their/our (the taxpayer) losses. BCLC has a contract to perform, too - with those who use and depend on Playnow to purchase of tickets for which they are funded. BCLC also has a contract to pay out prizes to those who are now being excluded from the relative lotteries by BCLC's inability to purchase the tickets that they have contracted to buy for the Playnow players. |
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Now let me deal with reporting to FINTRAC. As a long-time, retired Bank Manager, reporting to FINTRAC is simply filling out a one page form and sending it to FINTRAC. No fuss, no muss; the form can be completed by a clerical person who can read and write. To be fined $500,000 by FINTRAC only confirms just how astonishingly incompetent is the BCLC staff - from the top down. |
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what illegal gambling? heck, if it's illegal and it works why would you play legally and have this crap happen to you??? i agree with the first poster, why is the security forces not looking into this? this is identity theft, fraudulent banking, i'm sure if i read it over again i could come up with a few more! get rid of it now...failed after 1 week, sad pathetic government program to 'make' $$$...before anything else goes wrong! |
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