Friday, January 19, 2007

 

Lasvegastalk.com - Bill Stone - Slotmachinemastery.com

I noticed recently that this blog was mentioned on the forums at http://www.lasvegastalk.com/modules.php?name=Forums.

The subject was Bill Stone and his e-books service at slotmachinemastery.com. It seemed that the regulars over at their message boards were discussing the merits of Bill's system.

There seemed to be a good deal of skepticism at the idea Bill Stone could win $1000 a day on the slot machines. If he could, why would he waste time selling e-books to show others how to do the same thing?

Wouldn't you want to keep your methods secret? That way, the casinos wouldn't know how to counter your strategy. That way, you wouldn't have hundreds and thousands of other gamblers gumming up the works.

I mean, selling these books would create competition for you, and increase the chances casinos would take notice of this avalanche of people winning $1000 a day.

In the middle of the discussion, there was a link to one of my posts about Bill Stone. It was an early post, just after I had bought those e-books, so the post was trying to be open-minded.

I want those people over at Las Vegas Talk to know that since that time, I've become much more familiar with Bill Stone, and I've come out very much against the man. Unequivocally, Bill Stone is a scam artist.

The guy once sent me an ad for how to beat the lottery. He sells books explaining how magic isn't real. Actually, I agree with him on that one, but it's kind of like writing a book to show people that dragons don't exist.

By the way, dragons don't exist. I'm writing an e-book to that effect.

Seriously, though, I have several blog entries about Bill Stone, where I'm being sly and sarcastic about my own opinions. There's one where I wrote something like, "I just got slotmachinemastery.com. I'm going to try this out and let you know. This could be great stuff."

Strangely, I end up getting an email every couple of weeks from random people, where they obviously think this site belongs to Bill Stone, and this blog is shilling his e-books. These people always have a complaint, and want their money back from me.

I guess that one blog entry reads like a clever marketing ploy, especially when these people read my silly "I've made a million dollars playing slots" faux introduction.

So, for all those who might be wondering, I do not recommend Bill Stone's e-books. If he could make a $1,000 a day playing slots, he wouldn't be selling e-books for $49.

It takes time to write e-books...even crappy e-books. It takes time to write web pages as ads for those e-books, and to build websites as a platform for those ads. It takes time to go through credit card information and stiff-arm people wanting their money back.

So if Bill Stone was really clearing those kind of profits without all those hassles, he wouldn't be selling his so-called secrets.

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