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Dutch Boyd - Pokerspot Software Now Opensource

I don’t even know what to say here. And that’s hard to do.

The brother of Dutch Boyd posted this to RGP. Revisionist history, indeed.
—–

Subject: Pokerspot Software Now Opensource
Author: Robert Boyd

After almost 8 years in this industry (first as an entrepreneur/business owner, and later as a player), I’ve decided to leave this scene behind. I’m going to go chase my childhood dream of building video games.

Some of you already know bits and pieces of the Pokerspot story. Pokerspot was conceived in late 1999 in a hot tub behind my Silicon Valley apartment. My brother Dutch had graduated law school and had been playing poker in the casinos all summer. I was working for a major Internet service provider building out a high-speed Internet backbone. After watching Dutch play on (the biggest and only real money site at the time) Planet Poker, and realizing the giant hole in their feature set (omaha, stud, stt/mtts), we decided to launch the spot.

Many of you have wrongly held my brother personally and solely accountable for Pokerspot’s unraveling — as if he had single-handedly devised a plot to launch a would-be successful cardroom, met with some huge initial success, and in the greatest act ever of prematurely leaving a great game, absconded with half a million in player deposits rather than continue to grow a successful company in an industry undergoing explosive growth. Most of you are probably intelligent and mature enough to realize that a company like Pokerspot calls for the efforts of a major team, and that even though Dutch has taken it upon himself to disregard one of the biggest reasons for the formation of a corporation (limiting liability) in paying back a small percentage of the players thousands of dollars out of his own pocket — he has absolutely no reason to do so. Personally I hope he stops. My feeling on it is that anyone that had the balls to buy into a poker site in an entirely unregulated industry (remember it’s the year 2000) deserved what they got (and why would you be playing with money you couldn’t afford to lose in the first place?). But, that’s because Dutch is a nice guy and I’m an asshole.

I left behind a promising career in a legitimate industry to start the site. Pokerspot was built on a budget of $80k that we had to borrow out of family coffers. My parents lost more money on the venture than the top dozen or so players did. I’ve had almost 8 years to come to terms with the fact that even though we were the first site to offer multi-player tournaments, even though we’d done so much to define the online poker industry at large, it was not in the cards for me to pull down tens of millions of dollars like my competitors had. I’m pretty much over it by now, but sometimes it still stings. We all took risks, and we all lost out. But it’s ok. Money can’t buy me love.

After NetPro Ltd. and ePayment Solutions both went belly-up after mass chargebacks from mostly casino/sportsbook traffic (and both probably suffering a “run on the bank”). After we tried unsuccessfully to offload our assets to companies like CyberWorld Group / Golden Palace (who inked a $1m deal with us to cover player liabilities along with small amount of candy for our shareholders) who reneg’d only after recruiting my senior developer and effectively stealing our source code. After all of this, we stopped working on Pokerspot, and we tried to stop caring. At some point you’ve just got to chalk up the loss, learn what you can, and move on.

So that’s we did. We left the business world behind and started to really play some cards. Dutch went to battle it out in the ‘03 WSOP and made enough money to rent our 5 bdrm place (the card castle) in Culver City, and form the crew. A little campy? Maybe.. but I defy anyone reading this to refute that our small group of friends really has changed the poker world (and I believe for the better).

4 years of this, and I’ve learned enough to know that for most of us there’s no bright light at the end of the tunnel. The winningest player I know was flat broke two months before his windfall tournament victory, and along with the skill he’d been building for almost half of his life, he had to enjoy a good amount of luck to win. Walk into any major tournament going on in the country, identify the “professionals”, and I’m telling you that half of them are buried in makeup and living a nightmare of maintaining a winning image just to keep the interest of their current and future backers.

No, the real winners are the operators, the casinos, and the media. Even the niche appendant companies like the affiliate marketers, the clothing lines, and the video training sites.

They’re juicing you so hard that it’s amazingly difficult to make it as a player. Oh, the winning players are out there too, don’t get me wrong. There are the phenoms. But I hold that if the numbers were really published, and the companies were operating transparently.. well.. I think Andrew Jackson put it best (even though he was speaking toward the establishment of the Federal Reserve — which makes it sort of ironic that his face graces our $20 bill now) when he said:

“You are a den of vipers and thieves. I intend to rout you out, and by the Eternal God, I will rout you out… If people only understood the rank injustice of the money and banking system, there would be a revolution by morning.”

I’ve almost completely lost faith in all of you to wake up and smell the coffee and help yourselves. Organize. Unionize. Strike. Demand lower rake and health benefits. God knows the overhead of operating these sites is nowhere near the amount of money these greedy bastards are stealing from you. Your beloved pros, the people you champion, they started their own sites and they’re sticking it in you too. You’d better make some serious changes.

Dutch tried to hand this to you on a silver platter years ago. I remember how excited he was when he imagined Rakefree, and he hoped that it would finally clear his name. You all heckled him and threw our previous mistakes in his face. In an act of cowardice, Pokerstars banned him over it.

So, that’s it. I’m done. Finito. But before my exit, allow me to make this one last act which may or may not have any effect on the industry. If not, I don’t really care. I’m moving on to bigger and better. I think after you make it deep enough in the poker world (assuming we maintain the status quo, anyway) — I think you’ll develop a sick feeling in the pit of your stomache over it too.

We’ve talked it over, and we’re opensourcing the pokerspot code. It’s ancient and ugly, but it should lower the barrier to entry and eventually maybe it will have the desired effect of eliminating the rake altogether and making poker a fair game for the players. Information wants to be free. So here. Come and get it. E-mail me if you need help.

http://code.google.com/p/pokerspot/source

Robert Boyd (aka TC_Clueless)
tc.clueless@gmail.com

Let’s not let facts get in the way of a good story.

From: Pokerspot Support - view profile
Date: Sat, Mar 17 2001 2:16 am
Email: “Pokerspot Support”
Groups: rec.gambling.poker

Dear Pokerspot Players,

As many of you are aware, several weeks ago we began experiencing problems
with our then current credit card processor, Net Pro, Ltd. We promptly
stopped processing through Net Pro and have since been unable to take new
player deposits or process cashouts. We are pleased to announce that we
recently signed an agreement with Surefire Commerce, the most trusted name
in the online gaming processing community, to process all future player
deposits. All cashouts requested after March 15* will now be processed as
normal.

In addition, we also are pleased to announce we are at a point where we can
start repaying prior cashouts. All cashouts that have been requested prior
to the 15th of March will be paid according to the following schedule:

20% by April 15;
20% by May 15;
20% by June 15;
20% by July 15; and
40% by August 15.

Please note that we will be paying all players who cashed out in January or
February an additional 20% of their cashout as interest. We are pursuing
several different avenues that might allow us the opportunity to pay all
players before the above dates, including a lawsuit against Net Pro, Ltd.,
some short-term loans using the software as collateral, and a pending
licensing deal.

Once again, we apologize sincerely for the inconvenience this situation has
caused our players. We recognize that there has been quite a bit of damage
to our reputation as a result of Net Pro, Ltd. and Barclays Bank freezing
the
player funds, and we can only hope that our reputation will be repaired once
we are able to pay all of our players.

On a side note, our service provider has upgraded our bandwidth to an
optical
fiber connection. You should notice decreased latency, and increased
playability. When new developments arise, we will keep you updated. In the
meantime, we hope to see you on the site.

Sincerely,
Russ Boyd
President, Pokerspot.com

* - Please note that this does not include cashouts made prior to March 15 that have been re-applied to a player’s account.

—-

My hero, Gary Carson, was one of the first on the case.

On Jan 21 2007 6:35 PM, Robert Boyd - TC_Clueless wrote:

>
> Gary, you obviously missed the point of the post which was to publish the
> Pokerspot source code under a BSD license for the community to use.

I understood that.

It took you about 5,000 words to get to that point. I guess maybe that passes
for well written at that law school that forgot to teach your brother to not
comingle client funds.

I’m sorry
> if reading my post was a horrible use of your time (maybe you’re just a slow
> reader?). I know you’re not getting any younger, and I know you probably don’t
> understand the technology involved here. But why don’t you keep the noise
> level
> down so that people who are smart enough to derive some utility out of the
> post
> can do so?

I didn’t say a word about my time. I just commented on your torturous lack of
writing skills.

I was polite and ignored your delusions about what caused you to go busted.

Gary Carson
http://www.garycarson.com

4 Responses to “Dutch Boyd - Pokerspot Software Now Opensource”

  1. Mean Gene Says:

    I loved this line, so very, very much:
    "My feeling on it is that anyone that had the balls to buy into a poker site in an entirely unregulated industry (remember it’s the year 2000) deserved what they got."
    It’s the defense Otter gave to Flounder in "Animal House" after they trashed his car–"You fucked up! You trusted us!"
    One hopes that anyone who thinks about hiring Robert Boyd in the future (or anyone who thinks about doing business with any company daft enough to hire Robert Boyd) will do some due-diligence Googling and come across that line. That should end negotiations right there.

  2. Jordan from HighOnPoker Says:

    I’m no investigative reporter, and I don’t know anything about what happened behind the scenes, but sometimes I feel like Boyd (or the Boyds) are over-villified. They tried to start a new poker room and failed. Did they run off with everyone’s money? I don’t know, but I haven’t seen any evidence of that. Businesses fail all the time. Sure, people lost money on their site, but that is one of the risks to playing poker online. Now, if they took the money and ran, that’s different. But if they did get screwed by their own lack of experience and the competitiveness and underhanded dealings of the unregulated industry, then why should we expect them to pay people back personally. It is just not how business works.

    Everything I have seen suggests that Dutch is just a guy who got in over his head and incidentally has psychological problems. But that doesn’t necessariliy make him a villified crook.

    Then again, maybe I missed something. I also understand why individuals would be pissed off if they lost their money.

  3. Russ's Cat Says:

    help! I am scared. Uncle dutch is coming over soon and its bath night!!!!! Get me out of here!!!!!

  4. maudie Says:

    The Boyd Boys just don’t get it - once again there is an attempt to scrape the rotten egg off of their scratched and pitted teflon surface. Their parents lost more than money on the Pokerspot debacle - somewhere in their parenting they lost the opportunity to teach them about personal accountability and integrity.

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