Card Counting Targeted by New Software
Posted on: October 19th, 2009 7:45 am | By: Jeremy Schrute
Gambling Review readers, meet Kris Zutis. Mr. Zutis has not yet graduated from college, but he’s already making lots of friends and enemies in the gambling world. Quite an achievement. When I was in college the only thing I had accomplished was racking up debt, constantly being drunk or hung over, and learning over 50 different meals you can make with ramen noodles. Zutis is clearly ahead of the curve.
A native of Latvia, Zutis is in his final year at Dundee University in Scotland. Zutis is an avid gambler and is even a member of poker clubs at the school. Zutis has designed a computer system for the final project for his Applied Computing degree that would detect card counters in blackjack. Yes, you read that correctly. A gambler wants to take away the only advantage gamblers can have over the casino.
The system has already garnered a lot of attention, with Zutis being invited to the International Conference on Computer Vision Systems in Belgium to present his system to top developers across the globe. According to Zutis, the program he has developed uses a complex algorithm to track the progression of blackjack games and monitor the cards played and the bets being made. Put simply, the system counts cards the same way a player would and then determines if a player is using the same strategy. If so, it’s reasonable to assume that the player is counting cards.
Having another weapon against card counters is certainly a good thing for the casinos, and Zutis is making some friends in very high places representing the house. However, he’s not exactly popular with blackjack players at the moment. The website Blackjack Hero, a proponent of card counting, calls the inventor “hypocritical” and says they “can’t imagine anyone liking a guy who sells out to the casino’s side.” The blog also pointed out that Zutis, an avid poker player, decided against developing a system that could affect his game of choice. Instead, he focused on blackjack.
It should be noted that Zutis’ program still needs some work before it’s ready to be unleashed in the casinos. It is just a college project, after all, but then again, so were Google, Facebook and Myspace. Also, card counting has never been possible at online casinos, so maybe someday blackjack players in brick and mortar casinos may have to deal with the same odds as online blackjack players.
Certainly Big Brother techniques, such as the eye in the sky, are already being used by casinos against gamblers and dirty dealers. One can’t blame the casinos for trying to get their hands on a program like this. However, the thought of a gambler selling out their own to make a buck just seems wrong. Every other game in the casino has a house edge that cannot be beaten by the players, but blackjack is the one game where a player who follows proper strategy and counts cards correctly actually has a chance to make money off of the house. This program would take away the only advantage the gamblers can have, meaning there would be no way for a player to make money off the casino, except of course by selling out and selling a product to the casinos that would hurt other gamblers. I guess young Mr. Zutis is a follower of the “if you can’t beat them, join them” philosophy. Such a shame.
Tags: Big Brother, blackjack, Blackjack Hero, blackjack strategy, card counting, casino blackjack, counting cards, Dundee University, eye in the sky, Facebook, Google, International Conference on Computer Vision Systems, Kris Zutis, Latvia, MySpace, online blackjack, online casino, Scotland, surveillance

October 19th, 2009 at 9:42 pm
It will be interesting to see if this product, when ready for casino usage, ends up in Atlantic City casinos. If it does, I would hope that its usage is challenged, hopefully in court. The charge would be along the lines that Ken Houston brought against the AC casinos in the New Jersey courts, namely that if AC casinos were allowed to bar counters, they were implicitly admitting that blackjack was a game of skill and since the casinos were only allowed to offer games of chance they would have to eliminate offering blackjack. What a great catch 22 that was. The casinos backed down but were allowed to implement certain measures against counters however (e.g., no mid shoe entry). So if AC casinos install this counter detector I’ll bet someone brings up the same issue as Ken Houston did. That being the case, counters will then flock in droves to AC. Of course there is a chance that this gadget will not be installed in LV anyway. If the system is subject to detection errors, even at a low rate (e.g., ~1%) a winning player who is not counting might sue the casino.
October 20th, 2009 at 12:53 pm
Nice post, I would like to read this blog through my RSS feed but i cant get it to work, any ideas?
October 20th, 2009 at 4:59 pm
RSS is working now, thanks