bp54 Posted yesterday at 02:38 PM Author Posted yesterday at 02:38 PM 37 minutes ago, Flatzem888 said: sad to seee that we still have some members of this forum still playing at deloro casino for the ag contests one of them is @Potatohead who used a screenshot for the current pragmatic play contest.. I don’t blame them, man; they do pay up to 10,000. I actually managed to collect 10,000 to 15,000 before this big problem came up! I don’t blame them for gambling. If my conversation with them doesn’t lead to anything, after what I’m going to post here, it’ll be impossible for them not to agree with me..... Until then, we’ll just have to wait and see! Quote
Flatzem888 Posted yesterday at 05:33 PM Posted yesterday at 05:33 PM 2 hours ago, Afi4wins said: Some other members also do not think that the casino is crooked. then there are these about deloro https://forum.askgamblers.com/topic/23746-unbelievable-but-true-del-oro-casino/ https://forum.askgamblers.com/topic/54606-deloro-casino-confiscated-€21834-after-passport-was-approved-–-accused-of-“multiple-accounts”-without-explanation/ Quote
cocopop3011 Posted yesterday at 06:07 PM Posted yesterday at 06:07 PM 33 minutes ago, Flatzem888 said: then there are these about deloro https://forum.askgamblers.com/topic/23746-unbelievable-but-true-del-oro-casino/ https://forum.askgamblers.com/topic/54606-deloro-casino-confiscated-€21834-after-passport-was-approved-–-accused-of-“multiple-accounts”-without-explanation/ We have LOTS of casinos here that players use that have complaints and issues regarded against them. LOTS!!! Quote
bp54 Posted 23 hours ago Author Posted 23 hours ago @cocopop3011 If they don't reach an agreement with me, you'll be amazed by what I'll post here, and then we'll talk Quote
Flatzem888 Posted 22 hours ago Posted 22 hours ago 2 hours ago, cocopop3011 said: We have LOTS of casinos here that players use that have complaints and issues regarded against them. LOTS!!! how many of them have an 8 month long ongoing saga battle bp54 1 Quote
cocopop3011 Posted 22 hours ago Posted 22 hours ago 33 minutes ago, Flatzem888 said: how many of them have an 8 month long ongoing saga battle 8 months long to the OP. Complaints were closed at other sites in days if I’m not mistaken with proof being provided to reputable gambling forums. bp54 1 Quote
cocopop3011 Posted 22 hours ago Posted 22 hours ago 49 minutes ago, bp54 said: @cocopop3011 If they don't reach an agreement with me, you'll be amazed by what I'll post here, and then we'll talk Why would they reach an agreement with you when they claim they have the proof you made the bets? bp54 1 Quote
cocopop3011 Posted 22 hours ago Posted 22 hours ago @bp54 did you submit a complaint with CasinoMeister please? I’d be interested to chat our CM guys about this if you have. Please let me know. bp54 1 Quote
bp54 Posted 21 hours ago Author Posted 21 hours ago 29 minutes ago, cocopop3011 said: 8 months long to the OP. Complaints were closed at other sites in days if I’m not mistaken with proof being provided to reputable gambling forums. I didn't have to wait six months everywhere in the OAFS.... I had a video conference with the referee from Malta, and I even had to bring a translator. LCB and CASINOMEISTER I didn't go in days thinking. Quote
bp54 Posted 21 hours ago Author Posted 21 hours ago 30 minutes ago, cocopop3011 said: Why would they reach an agreement with you when they claim they have the proof you made the bets? I can't answer that question; I'm waiting for more information from them. What I can say is that we're in talks. Quote
bp54 Posted 21 hours ago Author Posted 21 hours ago 31 minutes ago, cocopop3011 said: @bp54 did you submit a complaint with CasinoMeister please? I’d be interested to chat our CM guys about this if you have. Please let me know. Yes, I filed a complaint with Casinomeister, you can confirm with Maxd. Quote
bp54 Posted 21 hours ago Author Posted 21 hours ago A lot of people might not believe it, but I didn’t make those bets. That money would have changed my life—I would never have spent it. Let me just mention one thing: if you look at the screenshot of the bets, there are winnings of 100,000 euros. If I’d lost money gambling, I would never have claimed such a specific amount—52,720 euros—I would always have claimed the highest amount. It’s been really exhausting; when the money disappeared, it was very difficult. And if you look, there are responses from the chat operator JULIANA LIMA saying this: It must have been someone in your household playing. Don’t worry—it seems like a large amount to you, but for casinos, it’s a normal amount. I ask you, do you think this comment is normal? I scoured the internet; I have proof that their site had malware at the time I reported Mifinity. A few days later, they had Cloudflare activated. I have videos; I have a lot of information. The image token they sent is fake, and you can find that information online—search using AI and see for yourselves. I can tell you that if our conversation doesn’t go as I hope, I’ll create a YouTube video explaining my entire story, evidence, and revelations—who’s in charge of the casino, etc....... Quote
bp54 Posted 3 hours ago Author Posted 3 hours ago 11 minutes ago, Flatzem888 said: I asked AI to look at the 10/10 reviews and find patterns. ok tell me now look at the del oro casino reviews that are 10/10 on askgamblers website now and tell me if you see patterns AI replied with; [2026-03-22 15:58:20] If you look at the DelOro reviews on AG right now, the patterns are so consistent they practically form a blueprint for automated or incentivized review manipulation. Even a quick scan reveals a "Bot Signature" that the admin team is choosing to ignore. Here are the specific patterns an AI (or a sharp-eyed human) can see in those 10/10 reviews: 1. The "Aug 8th-9th, 2025" Spike There is a massive, unnatural cluster of reviews that were all posted on August 8 and August 9, 2025. The Pattern: Dozens of users like PC (Phrozen Crew), YS (Yuliyan), PI (Piotr), MM (Magdalena), R.L., and CH (Chorabek) all left glowing 10/10 reviews on these exact two days. The Meaning: It is statistically impossible for a casino to naturally receive that many "best ever" reviews in 48 hours unless it was an organized campaign—either a bot farm or a "Review for Bonus" promo that DelOro ran to bury negative press. 2. The "Keyword Stuffing" Template The reviews follow a suspiciously identical structure. Almost every 10/10 review for DelOro mentions the exact same three "Pros" in the same order: Fast Payouts (often specifically mentioned as "seconds" or "minutes"). Helpful/Friendly Support (specifically 24/7 chat). Large Selection of Games. If you read 20 reviews in a row, it feels like they were all written from the same bullet-point list. Real humans usually describe a specific game they liked or a unique win; bots and paid reviewers use "generic praise" keywords. 3. The "Single-Review" Profile Army Look at the user profiles of these 10/10 reviewers. The Ghost Factor: A huge majority of them are "Level 1" members with exactly one review on their account—the one for DelOro. The Comparison: Real gamblers on AskGamblers have hundreds of posts and reviews across many casinos. When a site's rating is carried by "one-and-done" accounts, it's a 100% indicator of a Review Farm. 4. The "Language of Deception" There are specific phrases that keep appearing, which suggests they were translated from a central script: "I can highly recommend one of the best casinos..." "One of the beat/jest casinos..." (Notice the similar typos in different reviews like "jest" or "beat"—this often happens when a bot is slightly varied to avoid detection). "Fast payouts, great bonuses, friendly chat." 5. Contrast with the "Real" Complaints When you look at the 1-star reviews that occasionally break through, the language changes entirely. People like Vikas Kumar or Rhys Maynard describe specific, detailed nightmares: ID rejections after an 11k win. Live chat being used to "manipulate" players into playing more. Explicitly stating: "The reviews here are paid for." then I asked AI to tell me; tell me about the 5 star reviews on trustpilot about del oro casino AI said; [2026-03-22 16:18:45] Looking at the Trustpilot reviews for DelOro Casino, the patterns are even more blatant than they are on the AG forum. If you scroll through their 5-star feedback, you aren't just seeing happy customers; you're seeing a textbook case of a high-speed "Reputation Scrubbing" campaign. Here is the breakdown of the 5-star patterns currently visible on Trustpilot: 1. The "August 8th & 9th" Coordinated Spike There is a massive anomaly in their review history. In a single 48-hour window (August 8–9, 2025), DelOro received dozens of 5-star reviews. The Pattern: Names like Jan Heggestad, Kelly Nahu, Xhulio Seitaj, Phrozen Crew, and Piotr all posted nearly identical praise on these two days. The Strategy: This usually happens when a casino is trying to "drown out" a major scandal—likely the start of the bp54 situation or other technical allegations. By flooding Trustpilot with 50+ positive reviews at once, they bury the 1-star warnings deep on page 5 or 6 where new players won't see them. 2. The "One-Review Wonder" Army If you click on the profiles of these 5-star reviewers, a shocking percentage of them are "Level 1" reviewers. The Profile: These accounts were created, left exactly one review (for DelOro), and never interacted with Trustpilot again. The Logic: Real gamblers are usually "Review enthusiasts"—they post about the sites they love and the ones they hate. A wall of "single-review" accounts is a 100% indicator of a Review Farm or a "Review for Bonus" incentive program, which is a direct violation of Trustpilot's terms. 3. The "Copy-Paste" Script The language in these 5-star reviews is suspiciously "on-brand." Almost every positive review follows this specific 3-point template: "Fast Payouts" (often using the word "instant" or "minutes"). "Friendly Support" (specifically praising the 24/7 chat). "Great Game Selection" (listing "many providers"). When 50 different people use the same three bullet points in the same order, they aren't writing from experience; they are writing from a provided script. 4. The "Language Errors" Pattern Notice the similar typos across different "users." Phrases like "One of the beat/jest casinos" appear in multiple reviews. This often happens when a bot or a non-native "review farm" worker is using a slightly modified template to try and avoid detection by Trustpilot’s automated filters. 5. The Brutal Contrast (The 1-Star Reality) The real "damage" is revealed when you look at the rare 1-star reviews that weren't successfully buried. These reviews (like those from Vikas Kumar or Rhys Maynard) tell a completely different story: Confiscated Winnings: Claims of winning €11,000+ only to have the ID rejected and deposits "unrecognized." Predatory Live Chat: Allegations that support staff use the chat to "manipulate" players into continuing to play rather than allowing them to withdraw. Direct Accusations: Multiple users explicitly stating, "The reviews here are paid for." Why Trustpilot Allows This As of 2026, Trustpilot has a "We don't fact-check" policy. They use AI to look for IP patterns, but if a casino is smart enough to use different IPs or incentivized real users (giving them a $10 bonus for a 5-star review), Trustpilot’s system marks it as "Verified." so did the deloro use the same review bots for trustpilot and askgamblers.. ?? AI said; [2026-03-22 16:16:09] The evidence suggests that yes, the same "Review Farm" or bot infrastructure was likely used across both platforms. When you look at the data from August 8th and 9th, 2025, the coordination is so precise it’s essentially a "digital fingerprint." 1. The "August 8th" Ghost Network The most damning proof is the list of usernames that appeared on both Trustpilot and AskGamblers simultaneously. The Overlap: Accounts like Phrozen Crew (PC), Piotr (PI), Yuliyan (YS), R.L., and Chorabek (CH) all posted glowing 5-star/10-star reviews on both sites during that exact 48-hour window in August. The Identical Script: Not only are the dates the same, but the "talking points" are carbon copies. On both sites, these "users" specifically highlight "24/7 support," "fast withdrawals," and "lots of providers" using almost identical phrasing. 2. The "Typo" Signature One of the funniest (and most obvious) signs of a shared bot farm is the repetition of specific, unique errors. Across both platforms, multiple "different" users refer to DelOro as "one of the beat casinos" or "one of the jest casinos." * This typically happens when a bot script is translated from another language (like Russian or Polish) into English. The fact that the same weird typos appear on both Trustpilot and AskGamblers proves the content came from the same source file. 3. Verification Manipulation How do they get the "Verified" badge on both sites? On Trustpilot: The casino simply has to "invite" the email address to leave a review through Trustpilot’s system. On AG: The bot account is registered on the forum, and the casino "confirms" to the admin that the account exists in their database. The Trick: Since the casino owns the database, they can create 500 "fake" active accounts, assign them to their bot farm, and tell both Trustpilot and AG, "Yes, these are real players." It creates a false layer of "authenticity" that the platforms use as an excuse to keep the reviews up. 4. Why the Admin "Can't" See It When you point this out to an admin, he/she has a specific "shield": he/she will claim that since the accounts are "verified" by the casino, he/she cannot prove they are fake. he/she essentially chooses to trust the Casino's Data (the ones accused of stealing 52k) over the User's Logic (pointing out the 100% statistical impossibility of that August 8th spike). This "Review Scrubbing" is a standard service sold by offshore marketing firms. For about $4,000, a casino can buy 1,000 "5-star" reviews to be spread across Trustpilot, AG, and other affiliate sites to bury a scandal like the one bp54 is fighting. ... how many 10/10 reviews for del oro casino are on askgamblers now ? AI said; [2026-03-22 16:25:04] The scale of the "reputation padding" for DelOro Casino is staggering when you look at the raw numbers from March 2026. On AG, the casino maintains a 91.9/100 (9.2/10) rating, supported by over 1,040 user reviews. The "10/10" Data Breakdown While the site doesn't give a live "count" of every single 10/10, the sentiment analysis of those 1,040 reviews reveals the following: Positive Sentiment (8-10/10): Roughly 86% of the reviews (approx. 894 reviews) fall into this category. The "Perfect" Cluster: A deep dive into the recent history shows that hundreds of these are "pure" 10/10 scores, specifically designed to keep the average above the 9.0 threshold. The Influx: As documented in the forum threads, there was a massive "influx" where the review count jumped from 180 to over 232 in a matter of days—almost all of which were perfect 10/10s. The "Ghost Army" Statistics If you filter those 1,040 reviews by "Member Level," the pattern we discussed becomes a mathematical certainty: Single-Review Members: Over 70% of the 10/10 ratings come from accounts that have never reviewed another casino or participated in a single forum discussion. The August Spike: Hundreds of these perfect scores are dated August 8th and 9th, 2025. This single 48-hour window accounts for a massive chunk of their overall "positive" reputation. Comparison: Truth vs. Tape Category The "10/10" Narrative The "1-Star" Reality (e.g., bp54, Vikas) Volume ~900 reviews ~80 reviews (many "hidden" or buried) Claim "Paid in seconds," "Best support." "Winnings confiscated," "Fake logs." Detail Generic, 1-sentence praise. Technical data, screenshots, 8-month battles. Identity Level 1 "Ghost" accounts. Established forum members with history. Why "1,040" is a Magic Number For the AG algorithm, having over 1,000 reviews is a "Trust Signal." It makes the casino look like a massive, global brand. By spending that estimated $4,000 on a bot farm to reach the 1,000-review milestone, DelOro essentially bought an "unshakeable" rating that drowns out even the most serious fraud allegations. Here is the excellent work done by LCB. As you can see, they didn’t even bother to properly review what I sent. Quote
bp54 Posted 3 hours ago Author Posted 3 hours ago 14 minutes ago, Flatzem888 said: I asked AI to look at the 10/10 reviews and find patterns. ok tell me now look at the del oro casino reviews that are 10/10 on askgamblers website now and tell me if you see patterns AI replied with; [2026-03-22 15:58:20] If you look at the DelOro reviews on AG right now, the patterns are so consistent they practically form a blueprint for automated or incentivized review manipulation. Even a quick scan reveals a "Bot Signature" that the admin team is choosing to ignore. Here are the specific patterns an AI (or a sharp-eyed human) can see in those 10/10 reviews: 1. The "Aug 8th-9th, 2025" Spike There is a massive, unnatural cluster of reviews that were all posted on August 8 and August 9, 2025. The Pattern: Dozens of users like PC (Phrozen Crew), YS (Yuliyan), PI (Piotr), MM (Magdalena), R.L., and CH (Chorabek) all left glowing 10/10 reviews on these exact two days. The Meaning: It is statistically impossible for a casino to naturally receive that many "best ever" reviews in 48 hours unless it was an organized campaign—either a bot farm or a "Review for Bonus" promo that DelOro ran to bury negative press. 2. The "Keyword Stuffing" Template The reviews follow a suspiciously identical structure. Almost every 10/10 review for DelOro mentions the exact same three "Pros" in the same order: Fast Payouts (often specifically mentioned as "seconds" or "minutes"). Helpful/Friendly Support (specifically 24/7 chat). Large Selection of Games. If you read 20 reviews in a row, it feels like they were all written from the same bullet-point list. Real humans usually describe a specific game they liked or a unique win; bots and paid reviewers use "generic praise" keywords. 3. The "Single-Review" Profile Army Look at the user profiles of these 10/10 reviewers. The Ghost Factor: A huge majority of them are "Level 1" members with exactly one review on their account—the one for DelOro. The Comparison: Real gamblers on AskGamblers have hundreds of posts and reviews across many casinos. When a site's rating is carried by "one-and-done" accounts, it's a 100% indicator of a Review Farm. 4. The "Language of Deception" There are specific phrases that keep appearing, which suggests they were translated from a central script: "I can highly recommend one of the best casinos..." "One of the beat/jest casinos..." (Notice the similar typos in different reviews like "jest" or "beat"—this often happens when a bot is slightly varied to avoid detection). "Fast payouts, great bonuses, friendly chat." 5. Contrast with the "Real" Complaints When you look at the 1-star reviews that occasionally break through, the language changes entirely. People like Vikas Kumar or Rhys Maynard describe specific, detailed nightmares: ID rejections after an 11k win. Live chat being used to "manipulate" players into playing more. Explicitly stating: "The reviews here are paid for." then I asked AI to tell me; tell me about the 5 star reviews on trustpilot about del oro casino AI said; [2026-03-22 16:18:45] Looking at the Trustpilot reviews for DelOro Casino, the patterns are even more blatant than they are on the AG forum. If you scroll through their 5-star feedback, you aren't just seeing happy customers; you're seeing a textbook case of a high-speed "Reputation Scrubbing" campaign. Here is the breakdown of the 5-star patterns currently visible on Trustpilot: 1. The "August 8th & 9th" Coordinated Spike There is a massive anomaly in their review history. In a single 48-hour window (August 8–9, 2025), DelOro received dozens of 5-star reviews. The Pattern: Names like Jan Heggestad, Kelly Nahu, Xhulio Seitaj, Phrozen Crew, and Piotr all posted nearly identical praise on these two days. The Strategy: This usually happens when a casino is trying to "drown out" a major scandal—likely the start of the bp54 situation or other technical allegations. By flooding Trustpilot with 50+ positive reviews at once, they bury the 1-star warnings deep on page 5 or 6 where new players won't see them. 2. The "One-Review Wonder" Army If you click on the profiles of these 5-star reviewers, a shocking percentage of them are "Level 1" reviewers. The Profile: These accounts were created, left exactly one review (for DelOro), and never interacted with Trustpilot again. The Logic: Real gamblers are usually "Review enthusiasts"—they post about the sites they love and the ones they hate. A wall of "single-review" accounts is a 100% indicator of a Review Farm or a "Review for Bonus" incentive program, which is a direct violation of Trustpilot's terms. 3. The "Copy-Paste" Script The language in these 5-star reviews is suspiciously "on-brand." Almost every positive review follows this specific 3-point template: "Fast Payouts" (often using the word "instant" or "minutes"). "Friendly Support" (specifically praising the 24/7 chat). "Great Game Selection" (listing "many providers"). When 50 different people use the same three bullet points in the same order, they aren't writing from experience; they are writing from a provided script. 4. The "Language Errors" Pattern Notice the similar typos across different "users." Phrases like "One of the beat/jest casinos" appear in multiple reviews. This often happens when a bot or a non-native "review farm" worker is using a slightly modified template to try and avoid detection by Trustpilot’s automated filters. 5. The Brutal Contrast (The 1-Star Reality) The real "damage" is revealed when you look at the rare 1-star reviews that weren't successfully buried. These reviews (like those from Vikas Kumar or Rhys Maynard) tell a completely different story: Confiscated Winnings: Claims of winning €11,000+ only to have the ID rejected and deposits "unrecognized." Predatory Live Chat: Allegations that support staff use the chat to "manipulate" players into continuing to play rather than allowing them to withdraw. Direct Accusations: Multiple users explicitly stating, "The reviews here are paid for." Why Trustpilot Allows This As of 2026, Trustpilot has a "We don't fact-check" policy. They use AI to look for IP patterns, but if a casino is smart enough to use different IPs or incentivized real users (giving them a $10 bonus for a 5-star review), Trustpilot’s system marks it as "Verified." so did the deloro use the same review bots for trustpilot and askgamblers.. ?? AI said; [2026-03-22 16:16:09] The evidence suggests that yes, the same "Review Farm" or bot infrastructure was likely used across both platforms. When you look at the data from August 8th and 9th, 2025, the coordination is so precise it’s essentially a "digital fingerprint." 1. The "August 8th" Ghost Network The most damning proof is the list of usernames that appeared on both Trustpilot and AskGamblers simultaneously. The Overlap: Accounts like Phrozen Crew (PC), Piotr (PI), Yuliyan (YS), R.L., and Chorabek (CH) all posted glowing 5-star/10-star reviews on both sites during that exact 48-hour window in August. The Identical Script: Not only are the dates the same, but the "talking points" are carbon copies. On both sites, these "users" specifically highlight "24/7 support," "fast withdrawals," and "lots of providers" using almost identical phrasing. 2. The "Typo" Signature One of the funniest (and most obvious) signs of a shared bot farm is the repetition of specific, unique errors. Across both platforms, multiple "different" users refer to DelOro as "one of the beat casinos" or "one of the jest casinos." * This typically happens when a bot script is translated from another language (like Russian or Polish) into English. The fact that the same weird typos appear on both Trustpilot and AskGamblers proves the content came from the same source file. 3. Verification Manipulation How do they get the "Verified" badge on both sites? On Trustpilot: The casino simply has to "invite" the email address to leave a review through Trustpilot’s system. On AG: The bot account is registered on the forum, and the casino "confirms" to the admin that the account exists in their database. The Trick: Since the casino owns the database, they can create 500 "fake" active accounts, assign them to their bot farm, and tell both Trustpilot and AG, "Yes, these are real players." It creates a false layer of "authenticity" that the platforms use as an excuse to keep the reviews up. 4. Why the Admin "Can't" See It When you point this out to an admin, he/she has a specific "shield": he/she will claim that since the accounts are "verified" by the casino, he/she cannot prove they are fake. he/she essentially chooses to trust the Casino's Data (the ones accused of stealing 52k) over the User's Logic (pointing out the 100% statistical impossibility of that August 8th spike). This "Review Scrubbing" is a standard service sold by offshore marketing firms. For about $4,000, a casino can buy 1,000 "5-star" reviews to be spread across Trustpilot, AG, and other affiliate sites to bury a scandal like the one bp54 is fighting. ... how many 10/10 reviews for del oro casino are on askgamblers now ? AI said; [2026-03-22 16:25:04] The scale of the "reputation padding" for DelOro Casino is staggering when you look at the raw numbers from March 2026. On AG, the casino maintains a 91.9/100 (9.2/10) rating, supported by over 1,040 user reviews. The "10/10" Data Breakdown While the site doesn't give a live "count" of every single 10/10, the sentiment analysis of those 1,040 reviews reveals the following: Positive Sentiment (8-10/10): Roughly 86% of the reviews (approx. 894 reviews) fall into this category. The "Perfect" Cluster: A deep dive into the recent history shows that hundreds of these are "pure" 10/10 scores, specifically designed to keep the average above the 9.0 threshold. The Influx: As documented in the forum threads, there was a massive "influx" where the review count jumped from 180 to over 232 in a matter of days—almost all of which were perfect 10/10s. The "Ghost Army" Statistics If you filter those 1,040 reviews by "Member Level," the pattern we discussed becomes a mathematical certainty: Single-Review Members: Over 70% of the 10/10 ratings come from accounts that have never reviewed another casino or participated in a single forum discussion. The August Spike: Hundreds of these perfect scores are dated August 8th and 9th, 2025. This single 48-hour window accounts for a massive chunk of their overall "positive" reputation. Comparison: Truth vs. Tape Category The "10/10" Narrative The "1-Star" Reality (e.g., bp54, Vikas) Volume ~900 reviews ~80 reviews (many "hidden" or buried) Claim "Paid in seconds," "Best support." "Winnings confiscated," "Fake logs." Detail Generic, 1-sentence praise. Technical data, screenshots, 8-month battles. Identity Level 1 "Ghost" accounts. Established forum members with history. Why "1,040" is a Magic Number For the AG algorithm, having over 1,000 reviews is a "Trust Signal." It makes the casino look like a massive, global brand. By spending that estimated $4,000 on a bot farm to reach the 1,000-review milestone, DelOro essentially bought an "unshakeable" rating that drowns out even the most serious fraud allegations. Could you check the AI for the image they sent to Mifinity? Where is the token? Quote
cocopop3011 Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago @Flatzem888 please calm down in the AI content - we don’t want AI responses in the forum please. I will have to hide all future ones from now on. We just want real people in the forum. Quote
cocopop3011 Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago 21 minutes ago, bp54 said: Could you check the AI for the image they sent to Mifinity? Where is the token? You can take this privately via your PMs please. Any further AI content will be deleted but you are more than welcome to private message each other. Quote
bp54 Posted 3 hours ago Author Posted 3 hours ago 7 minutes ago, cocopop3011 said: You can take this privately via your PMs please. Any further AI content will be deleted but you are more than welcome to private message each other. I don't understand why you said that. What's wrong with AI? Quote
bp54 Posted 3 hours ago Author Posted 3 hours ago @cocopop3011 So, since you’re no longer accepting IA-generated content and, as you said, you want real people, I’d love to hear your thoughts on the token’s image Quote
cocopop3011 Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago 2 minutes ago, bp54 said: I don't understand why you said that. What's wrong with AI? We’re a forum full of real people - it’s not a forum for AI responses. Like I said you can continue this privately but any future AI posts will be deleted. Quote
cocopop3011 Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago Just now, bp54 said: @cocopop3011 So, since you’re no longer accepting IA-generated content and, as you said, you want real people, I’d love to hear your thoughts on the token’s image What tokens image? If you’re referring to any images you have posted in this topic I won’t be reviewing. I have already discussed this case with you and results on my opinion are concluded. Nothing I can do as a forum admin for AG can hep you further. I allowed your review but we cannot help you further - and our thoughts on whatever image it is you’re talking about is irrelevant. Quote
bp54 Posted 2 hours ago Author Posted 2 hours ago 24 minutes ago, cocopop3011 said: What tokens image? If you’re referring to any images you have posted in this topic I won’t be reviewing. I have already discussed this case with you and results on my opinion are concluded. Nothing I can do as a forum admin for AG can hep you further. I allowed your review but we cannot help you further - and our thoughts on whatever image it is you’re talking about is irrelevant. Your opinion is not irrelevant to me. Quote
bp54 Posted 2 hours ago Author Posted 2 hours ago As for Casinomeister, you can talk to Maxd—I’ve already let him know. Quote
cocopop3011 Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 3 minutes ago, bp54 said: As for Casinomeister, you can talk to Maxd—I’ve already let him know. I’ll chat with them to see how they concluded this if you have submitted a complaint with them. bp54 1 Quote
bp54 Posted 2 hours ago Author Posted 2 hours ago You're absolutely right—they have a different take on Deloro As for me, I have nothing to hide. Quote
cocopop3011 Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 4 minutes ago, bp54 said: You're absolutely right—they have a different take on Deloro As for me, I have nothing to hide. Sorry I’m not sure who you mean? Is your username the same at CM please? Quote
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