How does slot machine fraud work?<\/strong><\/h3>\n\nToday’s slot machine<\/strong> games, i.e. their systems, are extremely difficult to crack due to complex computer algorithms. However, in early June 2014, accountants at the Lumiere Place Casino in St. Louis noticed that slot machines <\/strong>were throwing more money than usual, even though the larger progressive jackpots were not fall. Through surveillance cameras, they discovered a suspicious player who had won more than $21,000 in just 2 days. Later, other casinos in Missouri reported various scammers who had one thing in common: the perpetrators placed their cell phones near older Aristocrat Leisure machines, just before their lucky smiles.<\/p>\n\nThe investigation led to the fact that the Russian citizen Murat Bliev, who in 2009 profited from the ban on gambling in Russia, then owned a large number of slot machines<\/strong>. Namely, the fraudsters tried to change the slot machines<\/strong>, i.e. due to vulnerabilities and check their source code.<\/p>\n\nUntil early 2011, casinos in Central and Eastern Europe recorded strange situations where slot games <\/strong>of the Austrian company Novomatic paid out incredibly large jackpots. The company then admitted that by observing individual game sequences and their records over time, it was allegedly possible to identify a pattern in the results of the slot machines<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\nWhat is the sequence of these slot games<\/strong>? What is the key? Serendipity!<\/p>\n\n