How to Detect Fraud in Gaming Machines That Regular Diagnostics Keep Missing
Your diagnostics say everything is normal but the revenue tells a different story. Here is how bus-level monitoring detects the fraud that component-level diagnostics miss.
Your diagnostics say everything is normal but the revenue tells a different story. Here is how bus-level monitoring detects the fraud that component-level diagnostics miss.
You do not have a security team. You have a venue to run. Here is how to layer automated electronic protection with simple physical measures that any staff member can manage.
Your machine software is locked and cannot be changed. Here is how external hardware catches data manipulation at the bus level without touching the game software.
Not all cheats require signal injection. Some exploit the game logic itself. Here is how to detect and stop player-side cheat methods that attack the machine sensors and inputs.
RF shielding is physical defense against signal injection. Combined with electronic blocking at the diagnostic port, it provides layered protection that no single technique can match.
Your machine is acting weird but the built-in diagnostics say everything is fine. Here is how bus monitoring finds the hidden signal problems that diagnostics miss.
Waiting for the monthly report to spot revenue loss is waiting too long. Here is how to detect attacks in real time and prevent the loss before it accumulates.
Software fixes fail because the attack is hardware-level. Here is how external hardware protection stops cheating at the bus level, without opening the cabinet.
Buying gaming machine protection for the first time is overwhelming. There are dozens of products, conflicting claims, and no clear buyer guide. Here is the complete guide for first-time buyers.
When revenue is leaking, the instinct is to cut costs. Do not cut staff or hours. Cut the losses instead. Here is how to protect revenue without reducing your team or your operating time.