Showing posts with label ecogra. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ecogra. Show all posts

Friday, July 15, 2011

eCOGRA Accredited Online Gambling Sites Maintain Low Complaint Rate

PRESS RELEASE
For Immediate Release
eCOGRA Accredited Online Gambling Sites Maintain Low Complaint Rate

Majority of complaints resolved within 72 hours

London, 15 July 2011 - The 2011 half-year dispute statistics released by eCOGRA Fair Gaming Advocate Tex Rees this week show once again that eCOGRA-accredited operators maintained a remarkably low complaint ratio under 0.5 percent per site on average each month over the first six months of 2011. 

The majority of valid complaints received by the independent player protection and standards body were resolved within 72 hours. 

"Operators have responded in a fast and cooperative manner to those cases where I have requested information and explanations, and have been quick to respect my findings in each case," Rees reported, adding that it had been noted that a small percentage of players still tried to circumvent terms and conditions governing play and payouts. 

"This small category of players has become more creative in their tactics, but the operators have developed correspondingly improved methods to identify and then lock them out," she said. 

eCOGRA oversees the online gambling activities of some 145 tier one online gambling sites owned by some of the biggest and most established operators on the Internet, and makes available a free dispute resolution service to players using those sites which have been awarded eCOGRA’s “Safe and Fair” seal. 

During the first 6 months of 2011 a total of 475 complaints were received, 57 of these being in respect of sites outside the eCOGRA sphere of influence and therefore not accepted. A further 60 were invalid due to insufficient information or irrelevant enquiry. 

The 358 valid and legitimate complaints accepted by the FGA featured cash-in problems (41 percent), bonus issues (23 percent) and locked accounts (21 percent) as the main disputes, with an average complaint rate of 13 per week across all 145 accredited operations. 

The number of valid disputes resolved in favour of the player dropped to 40 percent, a decrease of 3 percent on the 2010 figures, Rees reported. 

“This decrease is attributed to a number of gambling syndicates breaking the terms and conditions that were uncovered by operators through the application of increasingly sophisticated tracking techniques" says Rees. “The use of multiple account and fraudulent documents are being picked up on a much more regular basis”. 

About eCOGRA 

eCommerce and Online Gaming Regulation and Assurance (eCOGRA) is an independent, London-based organisation sets online gambling self-regulation standards and provides an international framework for best operational and player protection practice, with particular emphasis on fair and responsible gambling. 

eCOGRA requirements are enforced through inspections and reviews, and continuous monitoring. Accredited companies are entitled to bear the “Safe and Fair” seal, indicating to players everywhere that all operational systems and games are fair and continuously monitored to consistently high standards. 

The Fair Gaming Advocate's free services are available to all players using Safe and Fair accredited venues. Disputes that cannot be resolved at the management level of accredited operations may be submitted online at www.ecogra.org/disputes for independent mediation. 

Accreditation is open to all software companies and their operators. 

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

eCOGRA Sites Have Less Disputes Report Says

eCOGRA Sites Have Less Disputes Report Says 

11 August 2010

LONDON, England -- (PRESS RELEASE) -- The independent player protection and standards body eCOGRA has released its latest report on remote gambling disputes handled by the organisation's Fair Gaming Advocate, showing remarkably low levels of player disputes at online gambling sites bearing the eCOGRA Safe and Fair seal of accreditation.

Online gambling sites bearing the seal are the subject to constant monitoring and annual inspections and reviews by the London-based non-profit organisation, now in its seventh year of operations. One of the requirements for accreditation is an operator's commitment to work with eCOGRA in the event of player disputes.

Fair Gaming Advocate Tex Rees reports that over the first half of 2010 there were a total of 376 complaints submitted to eCOGRA, 33 of which were at non-accredited operations over which eCOGRA has no influence, and therefore cannot mediate. A further 56 of the complaints were declared invalid due to insufficient detail, irrelevance, abuse or anonymous origin.


The remaining 287 disputes - 76 percent of the total received - were resolved by the Fair Gaming Advocate normally within 48 hours, with 47 percent settled in favour of the player.

"These numbers are similar, and in fact compare favourably with last year's numbers, despite the fact that eCOGRA now has 11 more accredited venues than last year," Rees reports. "We have actually seen a decrease in dispute mediation requests.

"We can attribute a portion of this drop in disputes to the fact that we have now been working with many of the Seal operations for several years and as a consequence a number of policies and procedures have been developed that translate to less cause for disputes. Our operators are also better equipped and motivated to deal with disputes at the operator level, which results in eCOGRA receiving fewer complaints."

Rees detailed Cash-in (43 percent), Bonus issues (21 percent) and Locked Accounts (21 percent) as the principal causes for dispute, with the number of cash-in complaints easing from last year's 51 percent.

"We dealt with an average of 11.03 disputes a week in the first half of 2010," Rees revealed, adding that this represented an average dispute rate per Seal operation per month of 0.34 disputes - slightly lower than last year's 0.37 disputes.

"This level of performance is satisfactory and well within the standards we have set for our operators," she commented. "Viewed against the very high number of transactions these well established, tier one online gambling venues experience on a daily basis, the number of disputes continues to be remarkably low."