Det er et godt spørgsmål. Jeg tror personligt, at disse spiludbydere og betalingsudbydere leverer deres tjenester til de dårlige casinoer, simpelthen fordi de ikke følger Casino Guru, brugeranmeldelser eller andre lignende websteder. De har ikke rigtig nogen afdelinger, der ville bruge noget tid på at undersøge deres casino-klienter fra dette synspunkt.
Hverken banker eller spiludbydere er specialister i forhold til brugerklager, kasinoretfærdighed osv. De dømmer derfor ikke rigtigt deres kunder ud fra dette perspektiv. Der er mange former for svindel. Når du vinder retfærdigt og casinoet lukker din konto, er spil- og bankudbyderne ikke engang klar over det. Den anderledes situation kommer i et øjeblik, hvor kasinoet forsøger at debitere din bankkonto, mens du ikke er klar over det. Så burde banken selvfølgelig være interesseret i sådanne sager, men efter min erfaring er mange banker ikke rigtig forberedt på det, da det sker meget sjældent.
For at forklare dette fra et lidt mere perspektiv, så ser betalingsudbyderne ikke nogen forskel i forhold til at levere betalingsmulighederne til et dårligt casino sammenlignet med en standard e-butik, der sælger tøj. For dem er det bare endnu en klient. Når det kommer til mulig svindel, er de ret forsigtige med reglerne mod hvidvaskning af penge, og nogle banker nægter at modtage penge fra kasinoer, der ikke er licenseret i deres jurisdiktion, men det er mest fordi de er bange for den lokale regering.
That's a good question. I personally believe that those games providers and payment providers provide their services to those bad casinos simply because they don't follow Casino Guru, user reviews or any other similar websites. They don't really have any departments that would spend some time on investigating their casino clients from this point of view.
Neither banks, nor game providers are specialists in terms of user complaints, casino fairness etc. Thus they don't really judge their clients from this perspective. There are many types of scams. When you win fair and square and the casino closes your account, the game and bank providers aren't even aware of it. The different situation comes in a moment when the casino tries to charge your bank account while you're not aware of it. Then of course, the bank should be interested in such cases, but according to my experience, many banks aren't really prepared for it since it happens very rarely.
To explain this from a bit more perspective, the payment providers don't see any difference in terms of providing the payment options to a bad casino compared to a standard e-shop that sells clothes. For them, it's just another client. When it comes to possible scams, they're rather cautious about anti money-laundering rules and some banks refuse to accept funds from casinos that aren't licensed in their jurisdiction, but that's mostly because they're afraid of the local government.
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