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Posted by Aegist on November 4th, 2008
I have been as active on SAG as I can be lately. I have updated the alert service listing, moving a number of the alert services into the Inactive section, and adding one new alert service to the list: ArbMachine. More work does need to be done though to tidy a few details up.
More interestingly for most readers, I am actively working on the final section of SAG - the Arbitrage Trading section, where I will go through the process of setting everything up for trading, and how to do most of the things required for arbitrage. This section won’t reveal everything you could possibly know about arbitrage - I don’t have that sort of knowledge, and I doubt anyone does. What this section will attempt to do, is help people through the setting up stage, and the accident prone early days. It will attempt to help explain the theory behind placing each trade in more detail, help out control money management, and also help prepare for some mistakes which might be made.
A lot of people are contacting me lately asking about help getting started with arbitrage, and about what bookies to use, what alert service etc, and a few people have asked for private tuition. I am not running private tuition courses at this point in time, and I probably never will. Ideally, this guide should provide all that you could need to get started, and any course I would run, would only restate what I have already put into this guide. If you can’t get started with the copious amounts of information freely given to you on this website, then maybe arbitrage isn’t the right option for you.
That being said, I am still happy to respond to questions and help out people having trouble where I can, as always.
Posted by Aegist on October 18th, 2008
This is a topic which I unfortunately have some history with. Risk Free Profit created the software SureBetPro and distributed it through an MLM network - quite clever really because it really took advantage of peoples desire to make easy money on several different levels at once.
It was through the MLM approach to distributing their software that I, and many other people were introduced to the concept of arbitrage trading. SureBetPro (SBP) was the first arbitrage software I ever used, and if it wasn’t for Risk Free Profit (RFP), this website wouldn’t exist. In the beginning I defended RFP against numerous people who claimed they were a scam - the fact was that I was using SBP actively, and making money using it. The price they charged for the software was reasonable; $140 a month; no multi-thousand dollar bills like some of the modern scams, and the software did pretty much what it claimed to do (not brilliantly, but functionally all the same). So based on the fact that they had a reasonable product, being cleverly marketed, it seemed reasonable that they should be a legitimate company. Why rip people off and risk retribution, legal retaliation, and/or prison time when you can make legitimate profits? Well turns out that even the most reasonable looking situations can still result in way too many people being scammed out of their cash.
RFP ran a member only trading pool where members could invest $600 - $1000 for a limited period of time. Everything about this trading pool sounded perfect. It made no unreasonable promises; your profits were not promised, they were based on actual results. The amount you could invest was limited to a reasonable amount so that everyone could have a fair go. The investment was restricted to a specific time frame; no long term compounding issues. And there was even an incentive for the company to offer this - in order to claim any trading pool profits, you had to be a full time member of RFP - ie, you had to keep making your $140 USD payments every month without fail. So the pool looked like a clever tool to ensure their member base never shrunk…
But I was wrong. After a little over a year of running the trading pool the first round of payments started to be made. And they were made successfully. People happily posted their profits at various online forums, doing the usual HYIP fan-boy thing by cheering for RFP and proclaiming their faith in the goodness of RFP etc etc. Having the exact effect every Ponzi scheme could ever hope for - creating the illusion that this company is reliable and safe to invest in. More people surely invested significantly more money into the trading pool. Numerous people paid out in the first round undoubtedly put more money in for another turn. And it wasn’t long after this that RFP suddenly started having ‘Problems…’ with their payouts.
The list of reasons were bloody interesting actually. I think the first excuse was that their bank account froze their funds because of the massive movement of money out of international bookmakers - it flagged money laundering concerns. The bank supposedly froze their funds, and RFP had no option but to wait for the banks to resolve their concerns. Apparently the bank would hold the funds for 6 months before releasing them again. Yeah right, as if Banks have the right to just take money from their customers and hold them for arbitrary periods of time, just because they want to. Apparently RFP could do nothing about it, and had to swallow it - I mean, the members who were owed money had to swallow it.
Some time after that 6 month period passed, still no pool pay outs. I think it was at about this time that the US passed the safe ports act, and Neteller found itself in trouble with the USA. It was being investigated by the FBI, and it did actually have a lot of its funds frozen. RFP jumped straight onto this band wagon and started claiming that this was the new reason they couldn’t make payouts now - their money was trapped in Neteller by the US government. There was nothing they could do about it! Everyone would just have to keep on waiting. No mention was made of the previous ‘money frozen in bank accounts’ excuse of course…
At this stage over a year had passed since they had stopped making any sort of payment from their members only trading pool, and I had, like most other people no doubt, completely lost interest. I had stopped using SureBetPro many many months before hand (it had lost any competitive edge it may have once held, and I found other software better and cheaper on the market), and so RFP was of no interest to me. I’m sure there were a few other headline worthy excuses for why their members own trading pool money couldn’t be paid to those members - I wouldn’t be surprised if the current standing excuse was because the bank they had the money frozen in has just collapsed under the credit crunch and all of the money has been lost!
So anyway, for all of this time SBP has continued to be on the alert service listing page because it has continued to provide an arbitrage alert service. The dodgy operations of RFP have given me cause to warn people away from RFP and SBP for a couple of years now, but the alert service has continued working regardless - just without any sign of improvement, upgrade, or clearing of old junk (the damn software still has a filter in it for pointbet and several other LONG deceased bookmakers).
In the last couple of months though, it seems RFP has finally left us for good. A couple of people have contacted me letting me know that they can’t get on the RFP website. If you follow the link from the alert services it takes you to a default Apache page, and this has been the case with every other SBP link i can find online. However, if you go to http://www.riskfreeprofit.com, the website does still seem to be there. Historically, you can only register with RFP through a referral. Maybe RFP have simply cut off all of the old referral links but are still operating, but I’m not willing to try to register to find out
Whatever the actual case though, this is a long winding sad story of people losing money to a greedy company - like so many other stories on the internet.
Posted by Aegist on May 23rd, 2008
Wow, its a Surebet-a-thon in that title isn’t it?
First of all, mySurebets is a brand new service just launched, and I have added them to the arbitrage alert service page *and* SureBetBookies (I’m quite proud of my efficiency there, but please, hold your applause…).
Since I was updating SureBetBookies with a new alert service, I also added Oddstorm, who I embarrassingly forgot to add when I did the major update to it a few weeks ago. Sorry Oddstorm! All good now though, users can easily search Oddstorm bookies as well as any other alert service bookmakers.
I also removed Surebet Zone from the SBB database because Surebet Zone are no longer taking subscribers and are ‘restructuring’ their website. So they may be back with a change, or they may stop doing arbitrage altogether - not sure at this stage. Accordingly, they have been moved into the “Inactive” section of the alerts page.
In other news, I am actually going to finally finish the 3rd section of SAG - the how to trade section. It has been a long time coming, but I swear I’ll do it this time. I have written much of it out, just proof reading and re-structuring it so that it all makes sense - it is very difficult to explain! We are also working on growing SureBetBookies rapidly over the next few weeks. The initial goal is 150 bookmakers, but we may even make this 200 bookmakers as we are moving pretty fast now.
And finally, in light of the interest in my previous article about Arbitrage Trading as being completely neglected by the Work At Home industry - if anyone who operates a work at home blog or website is interested in writing about Sports Arbitrage (offering something *unique* to your readers), feel free to contact me for more information, more resources, or just to ask a few questions. I may also consider writing articles myself if requested.
Posted by Aegist on May 14th, 2008
Profit From Differences (PFD Trading) and Progressive Trading (PT Trading…Progressive trading trading?) are two new terms created for sports arbitrage trading by a company trying to sell their own arbitrage alert software for sums in the order of €10000.
There has already been a bit of discussion over at Arbforum in a thread about several companies related to the PFD trading operation (read the thread here).
All I want to say here, is that we have received complaints from customers of several companies
who sell arbitrage software at these highly inflated prices (thousands of dollars/euro/pounds up front). The most common complaint is that the arbs are gone before they can place them, or that the profit is small at best, and that there is no way they will ever make back their investment. I have previously written on the dangers of purchasing arbitrage alert software - something which I consider to be a ’service’ which is delivered over time; not a product which you buy once and take home with you - from companies who only offer the option to buy their software upfront without any need for ongoing fees.
See my original article on the Dangers of Large Upfront Payments for Arbitrage Alert Software.
Posted by Aegist on May 9th, 2008
Easyodds.eu, Bettor-Paradise, Shurebet Plays4You and Arbets have all been added to the alert services page. They have also all been added to the SureBetBookies database, and all of the alert services have had their bookmaker lists updated within the database (so all lists are now accurate so far as our bookmaker list goes).
We have already started adding a few more bookmakers to our database, and more will be continually added over the coming months. Please remember that if you find any information on SureBetBookies to be innacurate in anyway, it is easy to go to that bookmakers details page and submit a Correction form to inform us. We are constantly checking the information ourselves, but with over 100 bookmakers now in the database, the information changes faster than we can find it.
Back to the alert service page - in the interests of page speed we have split the alert services page into two, removing all of the extinct alert services from the main page. The main page of active alert services is still pretty long, so it will still take a while to load, but not as long as it was taking. Please tell us if you find the loading time to still be too long and we will consider breaking it up into even smaller sections.
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