For those who are interested the cheating scandel happened at Absolute Poker. One player was able to hack the system and see the hole cards of the other players.
It's also worth mentioning that he (
this guy) was working at Absolute Poker, as a consultant, but still near the top. I think there was only one guy above him in the hierarchy, and that guy was an old friend of his. (Edit: I see now that the article I linked to describes him as a "low-level supervisor". I could be wrong about his relative position in the company, but I'm pretty sure that one of the top managers was a college buddy of his). He didn't "hack" the system. He just used a feature that was already built into it.
The poker site offered the cheater a deal. Tell them how he did it and they wouldn't charge him criminally. I think alot of the money was refunded to the losing players, but this cheater still got away with millions of dollars.
I doubt they let him keep the money, but I wouldn't be shocked if they did. It was clear from the start that they just wanted the whole thing to be over as soon as possible. There are lots of other things in this story that are disappointing and/or disgusting. For example:
* Lots of poker players were arguing at the time that we should just keep quiet about this so that it doesn't get reported in the media. (The reason was that they felt that any publicity about something bad will make it more difficult to make poker completely legal in the USA).
* None of the poker players who got robbed even tried to get a law enforcement agency to look into this.
* Absolute Poker didn't lose many customers because of this. (The poker players of the world proved to all the poker sites that they can abuse us any way they want without risking a significant financial loss. Seriously, why would
any site bother to make anything more than a minimal effort to prevent cheating after this?).
* The gaming commission didn't revoke their license, or anything like that. They only gave them a relatively small fine.
* The gaming commission in this case is the Kahnawake Gaming Commission, run by the Mohawk tribe at Kahnawake, Canada. Guess who owns Absolute Poker: Joe Norton, former chief of the Mohawk tribe and one of the founders of the gaming commission.