God dag til dig, Hector!
Jeg har overvejet den nuværende situation og om der findes et bedre alternativ, men jeg ender altid med at vende tilbage til licensmyndigheden. Den nuværende situation, baseret på licenser, gør det generelt forståeligt, at når et spil først er licenseret, kommer det fra den licenserede udbyder og tilbydes gennem det licenserede casino - alt er i orden.
Se hvad chatGPT har at sige:
"Udvikleren (softwarehuset) skriver spillet."
– Dette inkluderer RNG (tilfældig talgenerator), som "blander" resultaterne. Det er normalt baseret på veletablerede kryptografiske eller andre anerkendte algoritmer.
Et uafhængigt testlaboratorium – en akkrediteret tredjepart.
– Det drejer sig om virksomheder som eCOGRA, Gaming Laboratories International (GLI), iTech Labs, BMM Testlabs og andre.
– Deres ingeniører og matematikere udfører en fuld revision af spillet (især RNG'en):
Kildekodegennemgang – De verificerer, at tilfældige generatorer (RNG'en) ikke har bagdøre, opfører sig i henhold til specifikationerne og ikke har nogen "hints" til casinoet.
Statistiske tests – De simulerer et enormt antal spins eller resultater og kontrollerer, at gevinstfrekvensen matcher den erklærede teoretiske husfordel.
Beregningsvalidering – De kører standard testpakker (NIST STS, Dieharder, TestU01 osv.) for at bekræfte, at tilfældige generatorer (RNG) opfylder de relevante standarder.
– Hvis alt går igennem, udsteder de et certifikat til operatøren, der bekræfter, at spillet er fair, og at tilfældige generatorer (RNG) er sikret.
Licensmyndigheden (regulatoren) godkender certifikatet og udsteder licensen.
– Regulatoren behøver ikke selv at forstå alle de tekniske detaljer – de stoler på, at det akkrediterede laboratorium følger ISO/IEC-standarderne for test af spilsoftware.
– Nogle gange foretager tilsynsmyndighederne deres egen "mystery shopping" eller stikprøvekontroller, men det hårde arbejde udføres af de uafhængige laboratorier.
Så er der faktisk én ting, der er værd at tjekke ud:
"Kontrol af certifikater i offentlige lister"
De fleste myndigheder (UKGC, MGA osv.) har en liste over alle licenserede spil på deres hjemmesider sammen med de laboratorier, der har udstedt deres certifikater. En spiller kan nemt verificere, at en bestemt "RNG-vurdering" faktisk findes, og at den kommer fra det laboratorium, der er opført i det officielle register.
Hvis et laboratorium "forsvinder" eller får sin akkreditering trukket tilbage, udsender tilsynsmyndigheden typisk en offentlig erklæring, der angiver, at en bestemt testinstitution ikke længere opfylder kravene. Spillerne ser derefter, at de "bedre casinoer" leder efter et andet laboratorium, der stadig er på listen.
Så hvis alle disse punkter er i overensstemmelse med proceduren, er der vel ikke meget, nogen myndighed overhovedet ville "undersøge".
Hvis RNG-basen er tilstrækkelig, kan spillet udvise fejllignende adfærd, lejlighedsvis fryse og være af dårlig kvalitet, men RNG'en antages at være intakt.
Jeg er ikke sikker på, om det er nyttigt, men jeg tænkte, at du måske også ville læse det.
Good day to you, Hector!
I have been contemplating the current state of affairs and whether there is a better alternative, but I always find myself returning to the licensing authority. The current situation, based on licenses, makes it generally understandable that once a game is licensed, it comes from the licensed provider and is offered through the licensed casino - all is well.
See what chatGPT has to say:
"The developer (software house) writes the game.
– This includes the RNG (random number generator), which "shuffles" the outcomes. It’s usually based on well-established cryptographic or other recognized algorithms.
An independent testing laboratory—an accredited third party.
– These are companies like eCOGRA, Gaming Laboratories International (GLI), iTech Labs, BMM Testlabs, and others.
– Their engineers and mathematicians perform a full audit of the game (especially the RNG):
Source-code review – They verify that the RNG has no backdoors, behaves according to spec, and has no "hints" for the casino.
Statistical tests – They simulate enormous numbers of spins or outcomes and check that the frequency of wins matches the declared theoretical house edge.
Computational validation – They run standard test suites (NIST STS, Dieharder, TestU01, etc.) to confirm that the RNG meets the relevant standards.
– If everything passes, they issue the operator a certificate stating that the game is fair and the RNG is airtight.
The licensing authority (regulator) approves the certificate and issues the license.
– The regulator doesn’t have to understand all the technical details themselves—they trust the accredited lab to follow ISO/IEC standards for testing gaming software.
– Sometimes regulators do their own "mystery shopping" or spot checks, but the heavy lifting is done by the independent labs."
So there is actually one thing worth checking out:
"Checking Certificates in Public Lists
Most authorities (UKGC, MGA, etc.) have on their websites a list of all licensed games along with the laboratories that issued their certificates. A player can easily verify that a particular "RNG assessment" actually exists and that it comes from the laboratory listed on the official registry.
If a laboratory "disappears" or has its accreditation withdrawn, the regulator typically issues a public statement indicating that a certain testing institution no longer meets the requirements. Players then see that the "better casinos" are looking for another laboratory that still remains on the list."
So actually, if all those points are in line with the procedure, I guess there is not much any authority would even "investigate".
If the RNG base is adequate, the game may exhibit glitch-like behavior, occasionally freeze, and be of poor quality, but the RNG is assumed to be intact.
I am not sure whether this is helpful, but I thought you might want to read that too.
Automatisk oversættelse: