Poker Malware
This is the ultimate list of the best poker software for 2020 (free tools included). These are the absolute best poker software tools that poker pros are using to crush the games in 2020. BlackRain79 - Micro Stakes Poker Strategy The Blog of BlackRain79, #1 Winnings of All-Time at the Micros. PokerStove is a free piece of software that allows you to calculate Texas Hold’em poker starting hands odds. Punch the hands in for the respective players and PokerStove will quickly evaluate the. The malware was supposedly installed while players were out of their hotel rooms during major tournaments, such as at European Poker Tour events. If that story sounds familiar, it’s because several. A unique malware has been found by security experts which spies on the players of online poker gaming sites, specifically Full Tilt Poker and PokerStars and is encoded to take screenshots of a victim’s game and then send it to the attacker, states a security researcher Robert Lipovsky at ESET.
Don Hankins, Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 License. I2Ninja is a Russian malware product that is targeting the online poker industry. It uses the I2P shadow internet to allow peer to peer communication and access users’ privately stored information—the authors even promise help desk support.
High-stakes poker player Masaaki Kagawa reportedly has been arrested by police in Japan for allegedly, according to Symantec, “distributing spam that included emails with links to download ‘Android.Enesoluty’ — malware used to collect contact details stored on the owner’s device.”
Kagawa was one of eight individuals to be busted.
The operation reportedly ran from around September 2012 to April 2013, stopping only after law enforcement raided the office of the company — Tokyo IT firm Koei Planning.
According to Symantec, around 150 domains were registered to host the malicious apps and “according to media reports, the group was able to collect approximately 37 million email addresses from around 810,000 Android devices. The company earned over 390 million yen (about $3.9 million) by running a fake online dating service called Sakura in the last five months of the spam operation. Spam used to lure victims to the dating site was sent to the addresses collected by the malware.”
Over the past handful of years, Kagawa has accumulated nearly $1.5 million in lifetime poker tournament earnings. In February of this year, he finished third in the $100,000 buy-in high roller event at the Aussie Millions. He cashed for about $330,000.
Poker Game Malware
Kagawa is from Tokyo.