CCP Peligro (EVE Online) Oct 12, 15:22 UTCSo I opened TS3 and those from IWISK was now back on my TS3 server and I started to understand what the damage was, and it was everyone, it was a swift attack from young Mr CCP Peligro.
Hi,
This mail is sent to inform you that your EVE Online accounts have permanently banned, in light of EULA violations. Specifically, you were found to be using your accounts "XYZ" and "XYZ1" for business purposes, in violation of the EULA, Section 2.A.
Your continued access to the System and license to play the Game is subject to proper conduct. Without limiting CCP's rights to control the Game environment, and the conduct of the players within that environment, CCP prohibits the following practices that CCP has determined detract from the overall user experience of the users playing the Game.
2.A "Accounts may not be used for business purposes. Access to the System and playing EVE is intended for your personal entertainment, enjoyment and recreation, and not for corporate, business, commercial or income-seeking activities. Business entities and anyone who is acting for or on behalf of a business or for business purposes may not establish an Account, access the System or play EVE. Accessing the System or using the Game for commercial, business or income-seeking purposes is strictly prohibited."
Questions | Answers |
---|---|
Do you feel that PPUK is regarded as a serious and "real" political party by the other, larger and well known political parties? | Yes, to a greater or lesser degree based on the party. North-West Labour MEP Arlene McCarthy, in her e-mail to other S&D members called us, and the Greens, out by name as an electoral threat when trying to convince her colleagues to vote against Net Neutrality, for example. |
Likewise, the Green Party are also worried about us. | |
We are still a new political movement, though, so it will take time for our presence to work its way through the political system. | |
Should they be though? I've supported both the Pirates and the Greens for a couple of years, and I think they're perfectly compatible with each other. The Green Party takes net neutrality/privacy etc very seriously (in contrast to the 'main' parties), whilst their social and environmental policies are strong (and evidence-based) in areas where the Pirate Party is lacking. Clearly the Greens and Pirates are in different places on the political spectrum, but I'm always cautious of political splintering when it comes to fringe parties. Thoughts? | The priorities are important. The Greens picked up what amounts to Pirate Party policy on both copyright and digital rights and use and campaign on it, but they don't seem all that committed across the board. That is to say that if you look, you will see Green support for TV style watersheds being applied to the internet etc... (I'm told this is just the Greens in the eastern part of the UK, but its a policy from May this year..). The dedication to all of those aspect seem a little lacking, although they should be perfectly in line with Green principles! The question is whether they will push on the issues (and especially whether they would do so without a Pirate MEP in the European Group and a national Pirate Party talking about it at the national and local level..). There are some incompatibilities too - we've seen Green party support for the destruction of GMO research crops... Now Pirates may not like the idea of GMO from a patent perspective, or indeed from a biodiversity perspective (and the lock-ins, dubious and not well tested pesticides/issues with the openness of some of that research etc..) but we won't reject the whole field of study, or work to undermine the research. |
I haven't heard of this before. However, this certainly isn't part of their manifesto. (Pages 32/33 Warning: PDF) | No, it isn't (and there is a paragraph of digital rights in there too) - Although I'm a tad concerned about the EU wide ID card type thing for accessing benefits between EU states in that one.. But that is a manifesto - anything left out is simply not what is being run on and, to be fair it may be a localised issues or one that indicates some division. Take a look at this set of documents, including the pdf. |
My point was more that the focus should be on challenging the mainstream political parties - rather than other parties who share many similar ideals. | Indeed, and I think the party have, and continue to do that fairly well, with the capacity we have in this election. We are campaigning on policy, challenging Labour, the Conservatives, UKIP and the Lib Dems where we think they are wrong (and the greens for that matter). As a party, we sort of owe that to voters really... |
Given that the German version of the pirate party essentially self-destructed in a flurry of unbridled nerd rage, inability to reach public consensus, fundamental misunderstanding of how to survive in German parliament and child pornography allegations, going all the way from over 5% (!!!) support to not being taken seriously by anyone anymore, how do you feel about the future of your party? What, if any, steps have you taken not to suffer exactly the same fate in the UK? Best regards, A disillusioned voter. | The Pirate Party in the UK is organised entirely differently and uses somewhat more traditional, but functional approaches to how it actually operates. Its important that the policy, approach, candidate selection and everything else are as democratic as possible, but a party needs to be able to make decisions and act.. That gives the UK a bit of an advantage. The other problem the German party had was a huge amount of success relatively quickly, that's hard to deal with, but - Good news! - The UK political system is pretty hard to get into, geographic constituencies and FPTP mean you have to be fairly capable just to compete (and we are competing where we are standing). That should help us to not end up in a similar situation. |
What is the best dinosaur? | Not sure about best, but my least favourite dinosaur is definitely the Conservative party. |
I am a creator of digital content, that's how I pay my rent. Why should I vote for you and how will I be able to do what I love if all your dreams come true? | The same way you do now by creating things people like. The Pirate Party advocates reform, not abolition of copyright. |
If anything you will be far more to create because you can build on and borrow from material that has existed for decades but is still locked away by creators and publishers. As an added bonus, by not screwing up digital distribution, or locking you out of the internet for not being a huge company, we'll make sure you have all the advantages you need to be more successful than you would be if the internet were regulated heavily and net neutrality abandoned. | |
You may however find that you can't create one thing and live off it for the rest of your life, whilst I realise that for most artists and creators this isn't the case now (sure, their work is not available to anyone, but the aren't getting paid for it either) it might be annoying for the lucky few - however we hope that on balance this will mean you create more and we, as a society are more able to appreciate and see what you do. | |
What is your take on users flocking to VPN services in order to torrent and avoid the government strike programme? | VPNs are good at hiding what you're doing from your own ISP, but the local network is not the only adversary. |
Should users make a stance and openly download thus sending a message that that copyright doesn't work, or should they hide behind a company to keep themselves safe? | We are calling for a change in the law, but we don't advocate that people break the existing law. If they wish to do so then they may be liable and that's purely a decision for them. All we know is that the current regime does not work and needs to be drastically reformed. |
Your sister party in Germany, Piratenpartei, seems to be destroying itself (nazi and populists infiltration, well known people like Udo Vetter leaving the party, etc.) , and keeps losing votes in the polls. Currently, they are at ~2%, while they were at ~10% three years ago. Do other pirate parties in Europe have similar results, and do you think the Piratenpartei will recover itself and get more votes the next elections? | The German Pirate Party grew very quickly and I think its not unfair to say that they struggled with that growth a little, but the German political system and even the way PPDE is organised is pretty different from the UK (and elsewhere). I hope they are able to recover, get stronger and grow to be the party that Germany needs them to be. |
2% is still enough to get a few seats, and things can still change, since polling is not infallible. That said, other countries are not experiencing the same decline: polling is up in Sweden (although not to the bubble levels of 5 years ago, which was more due to timing of the Pirate Bay trial), as it is in other countries like the Czech Republic (6.5%) and Slovenia (4%). | |
I've been thinking about joining the pirate party because the people who make laws governing the internet don't seem to care about it. At the moment I'm conflicted between voting pirate and voting green. Do you have any actual examples of environmental legislation that you might look at supporting/putting on the table? | You can take a look at our environmental policies here. |
Specifically, we want to adopt the Passive House standard for new-builds, invest in off-shore wind and tidal power generation, implement a bottle return scheme, adopt mandatory carbon footprint labelling for big-ticket items, and adopt a "polluter pays" position. | |
What's your view on nuclear power? | Nuclear power is an important part of our energy mix, and we should be investing in new plants to replace old ones as they are being decommissioned in addition to investing in offshore wind and tidal generation. |
Aren't all the pirate parties related ? How different can your policies be between countries ? | We are related, but each party's policies are decided by their own membership. |
We do have a Common European Election Programme, most (if not all) of the Pirate Parties running in the European Parliament election were involved in creating it or have adopted it. Nuclear power is not in there as there were disagreements between some of the parties - only things that we could all agree on are included. The overlap between any two Pirate Parties will be different, though. | |
What are you views on Russell Brand's comments to the disillusioned voters to 'not vote'? With the amount of influence he has with fans and the youth do you think this is a danger to politics in the UK? | It's a huge danger to politics in the UK. We already have abysmally low turnouts in parts of the country. In the last election we contested, in December, only around 10% of those registered actually voted. The city - Manchester - looks like it could become a one-party city. This is terrible news for democracy. |
We need a wide range of ideas and policies, the system only works if we have that. And the only way to have wide range of policies is for there to be more parties contesting elections, and more people voting for them. | |
The fact of the matter is, with turnouts so low anybody can win. Don't like the big three (or four, or five) parties? Vote for somebody else (and preferably, vote for us ;) | |
and I consider spoiling your ballot as wasteful as not voting. | In reality, nobody really cares about spoilt ballot papers (even if they should!). At the count, the election agents will be shown the spoilt ballots, but it all happens very quickly. It's only done to ensure that no papers are mistakenly categorised as spoilt. Nobody ever really discusses the number of spoilt ballots either. It's a shame more isn't made out of it, but you are absolutely right, when you are acting as an election agent and its 0300 after the count, there isn't a lot of attention paid to the spoiled ballots at all. |
A big thing for me is the EU, I know that there are problems with it but I think one of the biggest regrets in the forseeable future would be the UK leaving the EU. I strongly disagree with a lot of the UK population stance that 'everything we can do with the EU we can do without. So anyway, my question to the pirate party would be - ideally, how would you see cooporation within the EU work between member states? In your policy you say a referendum for the UK people to vote whether to stay in or out; are there certain policies that if you could get your way, you would decide that staying in the EU is better than leaving? If so what? | We also want the UK to stay in the EU and believe that it would be detrimental to the country to isolate itself by leaving such a big alliance that also happens to be at its very doorstep. The fact that we are pushing for a referendum doesn't mean we hope / want to get out. We just want to address the proverbial elephant in the room and get the referendum done and got over with (since it has received so much attention lately, not necessarily due to public demand), so that we can concentrate on improving / changing things with the EU from the inside. We very much think that we should stay in the EU on all counts (impossible to name just a single policy: well okay consumer safety, internet freedom, open data, trade agreements with the US, environment, energy, where do I stop). A caveat could be that we still think it's a good idea to retain the pound and not get the currently ill-fated euro. We are very privileged to have this best-of-both-worlds position. Nobody else does! As for changes in EU institutions and processes: We would just try to push for more powers with the (elected) European Parliament in introducing, passing and vetoing legislation. And we would push for more transparency and accountability / integrity both in terms of MEP expenses, and in terms of corporate lobbying and unfair competition that may affect the outcome of a vote in favour of private interests and against the interests of normal EU / UK citizens. |
Alternatively: Why haven't you been sending out literature like all the other parties, so people can know you exist and learn of your policies? | We have! Most (if not all) households in Manchester, Liverpool and Warrington should have had one of our leaflets through the door in the past week or two. We would've loved to get one in every letterbox in the North-West but we just don't have enough money to do it. We rely on membership fees and individual donations to fund the party. |
I cannot remember seeing a leaflet (I live in Firswood) | It will depend (of all things) on which Royal Mail Distribution hub covers your particular street. However I can point you at a (large - sorry) digital copy here - PDF's are linked at the bottom. |
Why are so many parties focussed on being anti-euro, as somebody who works in the technology trade, this is where a large amount of our business comes from. | The European Union is a complex organisation. I've spent a lot of time researching it (including taking a course on EU law) and I still get tripped up sometimes. |
Do you not think the Pirate Party image could be improved? I dislike wearing suits, but I wouldn't wear a hoodie for professional marketing shots. | People are wary of things they do not or cannot understand, and it's easy to fall in to the trap of believing simplistic arguments - especially when the reality is never explained. The media should take their fair share of blame here but so should political parties. |
What kinds of things do you think should be patentable, if at all? Do you think some of your policies risk scaring away big business? | The Pirate Party UK - and indeed the wider Pirate movement across Europe - is pro-EU. We would like to see a referendum on our membership but we would campaign to stay in as we believe it is a huge benefit to the country. |
Perhaps. I've even been criticised for having a beard in this election campaign! I think it's a good thing that we're not just another bunch of men an women in grey suits but there is a balance to be struck. | |
Physical items, mainly. Patents aren't innovation, they're the right to stop other people from innovating. | |
Micro and small businesses (those with fewer than 50 employees) account for 47% of all private-sector employment and 33% of turnover, and it's smaller businesses that can be trampled over with the current patent system. Larger companies can out-spend their smaller competition in legal fees even if they're in the wrong so reforming the patent system would, in our opinion, help smaller, more nimble, companies to innovate without the worry that they'll be ruined by a legal challenge. | |
Why should I vote for you? | Because we are normal ? :) |
OK, because we are capable and knowledgeable about the issues we are standing for. We are all professionals (Businesspeople, Academics, Musicians, School Governors), we have all been online since forever and want to keep it this way. We believe that we should all enjoy a free internet both for freedom of information, freedom of expression, and freedom of communication. Anything less is censorship that takes up back to the Dark Ages. It's like having a public library refuse to stock or give out a book on a controversial topic just in case you get proselytised on said topic. | |
By setting copyright restrictions that last forever and which actually stifle both creativity and new forms of art, and also actually deprive especially small names and unknown artists from the benefit of word-of-mouth (which is what makes people go offline and rather than pay £0.85 for an mp3, pay £20 or £40 to go to a gig or buy a book). | |
By patenting unpatentable entities (intellectual property, chemical formulas) that prevent innovation, reproduction, and multiplication that could bring prices down and give access to medicines and technologies to people in poor countries, and that just strengthen monopolies - by getting access to and selling your personal data in every app you use on your phone or your computer, and now more sinisterly by doing the same with your NHS and your tax data too. (And yes the UK Government bears full responsibility for this). | |
We stand for the rights of normal citizens over the money-making and investment-maintaining rights of big corporates but also over the dubious mass surveillance and monitoring rights of Governments. We are calling for open data and transparency, so that not just us but also every citizen can know what is planned in their name (and thus have the chance to protest or protect themselves). An example is the selling of sensitive NHS data to private companies (officially for research but that cannot be fully controlled once the data is "out"). UK citizens should have the right to both know that this data is up for selling and to opt out of this scheme. Currently neither is the case (okay, some people know of the plan and even fewer have already opted out). | |
By publishing data on what the Government is planning and doing and with whom and after consultations with whom, it is more accountable to its citizens but also the citizens have more control and are more involved in the political process. That's our core principle. | |
So yes we are associated with digital rights, but nowadays that encompasses every aspect of both private and public life! | |
And another core Pirate principle is evidence-based policy and participatory democracy. We use statistically significant data to decide what the facts are (and not sensationalist percentages in the media or political party broadcasts). And by putting the data out in the open for examination, we invite and encourage normal citizens (and not just "professional politicians") to voice their opinion and concerns. Then we can all decide what the best for everybody is. And that is true both for our policies on immigration, energy, the environment, social policy, and the economy. | |
So we don't call ourselves socialist or liberal or anarchist because we aren't any one of those things (and getting put in any of existing boxes and labels would do everyone a disservice). We are not Left, we are definitely not Right, we are logical and use common sense and basic integrity towards fellow human beings (and yes that includes non-Brits too :). | |
Any of this strike a chord with you?? | |
So, that is not an answer to the question I asked. It is a solid answer to 'should we increase our military spending to achieve tha biology to act unilaterally independently of the US' but not 'Do you Support the continuation of the Atlantic Alliance'. | Fair response - I think the point is that we have to work with more people, if the US doesn't like it then fine - we have to act in our interests. I actually don't think the US can do that and I think, as with the Syria stuff from earlier in the year, the UK actually has a lot more influence than the US would be willing to admit. |
The issue at the moment is that Britain is tied to backing the US in any and all it's foreign endeavours to maintain the alliance. Staying in the Alliance has its benefits, but significant drawbacks. Leaving the alliance similarly has massive benefits and significant drawbacks. | I don't think we should set aside the alliance we have with the US (either through NATO or other agreements) but we absolutely need to make sure it does what we need it to without gutting our own capabilities and, equally as importantly, it doesn't put us in a position where we do things, or are seen to be supporting things we shouldn't support. |
My problem with the stated policy and your response is that it presupposes that we can have our cake and eat it when the Americans have made it clear that this is an either or situation. | I don't see any position as unmovable and I think with the US and military cooperation, there is a lot of room for change and improvement. Plus, more independent capacity does mean that are both less dependent on and more valuable to alliance partners. |
can't compete with the US on arms sales. In what sense? BAE Systems does 26.8Bn in sales and is the world's 3rd largest defence contractor - all the other big players are US-based. | In the sense that there are several areas where our arms manufacturers have been barred from selling, or developing certain products because of agreements, or the urging of the US. A bar the US didn't (likely can't) Apply to its own arms industry. Now to be fair that's relatively historic, but the legacy is still with us. |
So, the whole point of the alliance is that the Americans can take it as a given. That is what they like. | Except it isn't. On intelligence specifically (and as we have seen over the last however long) there is real partnership, its not a one way street. Some of that needs to be seriously curtailed and oversight needs to massively improve, but its still a mutual effort. When it comes to various other aspects of military cooperation, the UK provides basing and support in areas the US can't (and the US does the same to the UK) and there is real division of effort. In short, if the UK ceased cooperation with the US, the US would also face significant cost increases. That's why the UK works with the US, as well as NZ/AUS/CAN etc.. |
but it would result in a significant reduction in military capacity | A withdrawal would, a change might. As the policy suggests, the UK does have to become more self sufficient in some areas, but we do pay for the US support currently provided - as long as the costs are managed, they shouldn't be excessive (and with a reduction in operational tempo over the next year, as well as changes in procurement should be achievable without a massive increase in defence spending). |
You will note too that the priority shift to conventional forces should actually be fairly cost neutral, yes pay, training and kit aren't cheap, but 'cheaper' than the alternatives. The level of US support for catastrophic situations is unlikely to change (its directly in the US interest), but frankly the cost of our commitment to the US over the last decade and a bit has been extremely high in lives and cash terms and not been anything like as directly in our interests. Would military spending be prioritised? No. But as with everything else, we'd look at the evidence to see what the most effective balance is, based on what people in the UK want and what is needed to maintain a proper defensive posture. | |
Do you feel that your party is likely to be really taken seriously while using such a non-serious name and therefore providing a non-serious image? Do you feel that this inherently limits the support you will ever achieve from members of public not initiated or informed about the internet and concepts of file-sharing and online culture? | Πειρατής (Pirate) stems from the verb Πειράττομαι / Πειράσομαι : to attempt (a change in Politics and Democracy) :) So there! |
Whats your position on legalizing weed? | >1. Drugs policy should be lead by the NHS/Dept of Health rather than the criminal justice system/Home Office. Drug abuse is first and foremost a health issue. |
>2. Policy should be developed based on evidence, not electioneering and prejudice. If the evidence suggests decriminalisation, then we should decriminalise. | |
>The EU (and the world as a whole) needs to stop looking at this as a criminal issue. The "war on drugs" obviously hasn't worked and the entire global system needs to be re-examined. | |
For this you acquire support from a lot of well educated young people who understand this, but the majority of older people still believe in an historic policy on drugs. | You can't please everybody I suppose! |
Do you have any hard evidence or statistics to back up your anecdotal "Our name is good"? I have yet to meet anyone who thinks it's a good name, and many people who I tell to vote Pirate say they won't even after I explain what you stand for, just because the name sounds like a joke. | On the campaigning side we do, on the ground it doesn't make it into the list of issues people have with the party at all. On-line it seems to be something that people focus on more. Now we haven't done and can't easily do any A/B testing, but even anecdotally (I've probably spoken to a few hundred people in the last year) it still seems like a net positive. |
If it weren't, we'd ask the membership to change it.. But there are 100's of parties out there (including the Internet Democrats..) with grand, or bland names, and I can't name more than 15 of them. The Pirate Party is pretty memorable and a name that doesn't really have any political connotations, so we get to talk issues and policy. | |
How do you figure out the Pirate Party positions on issues outside of the core competency of internet and speech issues? Is there a lot of diversity among members on other issues, or does it mostly work out that people who want to vote Pirate are pretty similar on other issues as well? | For our last round of our policy process, we actually used Reddit as our main tool (as well as e-mail, social media and submissions on our own site). Anybody could suggest policy and we drew on these submissions, and we produced a policy document from the 3000+ comments that we received. |
All policy is then put to a vote of our membership. | |
We do have a diverse range of opinion within our membership base. Some of our members are moderately right-wing, some are left-wing, but our basic ideology and commitment to civil liberties and evidence-based policy is what brings us all together. | |
We're currently working (along with the University of Lancaster) to develop a new policy development tool. If you'd like to help out I could point you in the direction of those in charge? | |
I had high expectations, and this explanation exceeded them. Yes, I'd be fascinated to see more of whatever new policy development tool you're working on. | Excellent. Send an e-mail to our party secretary, he's coordinating the development work: [email protected] :) |
Have the pirate party ever considered running in the Scottish parliament? | We stood candidates in the last Scottish Parliament elections in the West of Scotland and Glasgow regions and we'll probably stand candidates in the next one as well. |
Of course, if Scotland decides to vote for independence, then our Scottish members will have to set up Pirate Party Scotland first :) | |
Does the PPUK support Scottish independence? | We haven't taken a formal position on it. I know that we have Scottish members on both sides of the debate though. |
The Party supports self determination and I think our Scottish members were split so at this point I don't think there is an answer - I know Maria has said there has to be a referendum, but would prefer Scotland not to leave the UK (which is pretty much my position too). | |
When you get elected, which european group will you join? | Most probably the Greens-European Free Alliance. Our two Pirate MEPs from Sweden currently sit in that group (and Christian Engstrom was even the most green MEP in the group!) |
As I live in London does that mean I can't vote for you next week? | Unfortunately, no, not in the European Parliament election :( |
Also do you think that the name "pirate party" will have negative connotations that will put off most people? | If you happen to live in the Vassall Ward in Lambeth, though, you'll be able to vote for our candidate Mark Chapman in the local elections. |
No, I don't think so. The name is actually an asset to us, in fact. It catches people's attention and we've had feedback from some voters that the only reason they've given our leaflets a read is because the name was interesting. At events, when we're knocking on doors or talking to people in the street it's also very useful. The name is also a reflection of who we are and where we've come from - we're part of a global movement that has been successful in winning elections at every level: Local, regional, national and supranational. I don't think a generic or more worthy sounding name (the Internet party? Internet democracy party? Digital rights party...) would help us at all, it would paint us in a corner and frankly, be less effective at drawing people in. | |
I live in Westminster, so that's a no? (This is my first time voting for anything so I don't know how most of it works) | Sadly, that is indeed a no, at least for now. Please do think about coming along to a future meetup though. |
serious question: what would money be used for? ie: is this just to reach luddites, or am I misunderstanding the term "mail out"? | For the European Parliament elections, there is a £5,000 deposit just to stand. Royal Mail will deliver a leaflet to every household in the region for free, but we have to get the leaflets printed ourselves. As you can imagine, that costs a fair bit as well. |
Hi thanks for doing this ama. As a in the NW twentysomething who has become fairly fed up with mainstream politics I found myself agreeing with alot of your party policy, now I understand that copyright is at the centre of your agenda however do you not feel that by being named the pirate party, you are always unfortunately going to be doomed to the fringes of British politics despite having great ideas outside of this issue? | I think that if anything were to keep us on the fringes of British politics it would be the electoral system, not our name. |
As has been mentioned elsewhere in this thread, our name is actually an asset to us. We'd be called pirates even if we had a different name, purely because of our policies on copyright reform so why not embrace it? | |
Are you saying that the British public is more conservative / narrow-minded than the German, Icelandic, or Swedish public? We aren't? I'd say that the UK as a whole seems more conservative on any number of issues than those three countries. | I guess I disagree. I wouldn't be standing if I wasn't hoping that I am reaching many people and addressing their own fears / concerns / hopes. History will show who was right I guess! But yes I want to have tried at least. |
Wikipedia dude Jimmy Wales recently suggested that all pirate parties change their name to "Internet party" to be taken seriously. Are you considering a name change, and why or why not? | Sitting MEP Amelia Andersdotter has a response to this suggestion. |
What are your party's views on drug reform such as marijuna legalization? | See this comment by Jack. |
>1. Drugs policy should be lead by the NHS/Dept of Health rather than the criminal justice system/Home Office. Drug abuse is first and foremost a health issue. | |
>2. Policy should be developed based on evidence, not electioneering and prejudice. If the evidence suggests decriminalisation, then we should decriminalise. | |
>The EU (and the world as a whole) needs to stop looking at this as a criminal issue. The "war on drugs" obviously hasn't worked and the entire global system needs to be re-examined. |
Mr Green Casino review No deposit bonus at Mr Green Casino 5 free spins on Madam Destiny Megaways Slot ** Good on February 5th, 2021 only for depositors #283889 In addition to these, Mr. Green Casino gives you extra deposit methods such as Bank Wire Transfers, Click and Buy, Ukash and Entropay. The casino has a 2.5 percent fee for visa and MasterCard transactions and only a one euro fee for bank transfer. If you are using Skrill, Neteller, and PaySafeCard, the transactions are free. On Birthday, a player can receive a no deposit bonus of up to 25 euros. Guests of the virtual club are also entitled to rewards during happy hours – up to 25 free spins. Free spins are awarded if a player replenishes a deposit in the amount of 20 euros. This bonus applies to all slots presented in the gaming room. En voor een minimale storting van 20 euro ontvang je 100 Free Spins op de exclusieve ‘Mr Green Moonlight’ gokkast. ... 🤓 Biedt Mr Green een no deposit bonus aan? Nee, er is geen no deposit bonus. Wel is het mogelijk om de gokkasten en een aantal andere spellen te spelen zonder geld te storten. Mr Bit Casino 20 – 150 Free Spins. Bonus Code No code required . Read Review Play Casino. Casino name: Mr Bit Casino Amount: 20 - 150 Free Spins Valid for: Existing Bonus type: Free Spins Wagering: 10x(D+B) Valid for Games: Hotline Expires on: 2021-02-11. Minimum deposit requirements: $21 ... Mrgreen no deposit bonus → Gratis Bonus! MrGreen.com 5 Euro erhalten Mr Green. Spieler aus 28.12.2020 — beliebt? Erfahre alles Wissenswerte 25 no deposit free Guthaben sichern Einzahlungsbonus und die 25 No ; Bonusbedingungen sind nicht Weitere Informationen zuMr Green – 22.12.2020 — Aktivieren Spins 2021 – aktuelle Grün Freispiele ohne Einzahlungsbonus. Exclusive Mr Green bonus: 25 free spins no deposit bonus. You get the free spins immediately after completing the free player account registration process. On top of free spins on registration, there is a deposit bonus on your 1st deposit of a minimum of £/€20 that will give you 100 free spins and 100% of free money up to £/€100. Deposit bonuses are cash rewards you receive when you Eurocasino Deposit Bonus Code put money into a a USA online casino. Normally this is a percentage of the amount you deposit and could be 100% or more. Thus if you deposit €/£/$500 and are given a 100% deposit bonus, you will actually receive €/£/$1,000 in your account. The Casino Bonus is a first deposit match bonus and will be credited only once the first deposit has been made with Mr Green AND the Casino bonus has been selected. The deposit bonus must be wagered a total of x35 on slots in the casino before it can be withdrawn, in accordance with Mr Green bonus terms and conditions. Minimum deposit of £20 ... First deposits higher than one hundred Euros (€100) will only be able to claim the maximum bonus of one hundred Euros (€100). The match deposit bonus is awarded in bonus cash and therefore has a wagering requirement of thirty-five times (35x) as per Mr Green’s Bonus Terms and Conditions.
[index] [9989] [8802] [2681] [9902] [972] [4460] [9171] [3865] [4267] [7696]
🎈 Up to 200% Deposit bonus and 200 Freespins with: ... BIG TRIPLE SESSION vs £2,000 BANKROLL at Mr Green Online Casino! - Duration: 36:58. CROUPIER CASINO GAMBLING 197,129 views. Get Low Wagering Requirements At Mr Green Casino: https: ... Kerching Casino has a great no deposit bonus, offering you £5 right now just for signing up. Avoid Wagering Requirements Altogether 5:59 Mix Play all Mix - miikapekka YouTube 25 spins with the strongest 6 bonus cards [TAHITI $ 3244 WIN] [Online casino] [kaekae] - Duration: 7:23. Top ONLINE CASINOS in YOUR REGION / COUNTRY 📕 http://www.online-casinos-tube.com/online-casinos-by-country-the-best-sites-in-region/ 📕 https://www.facebo... No links in my stream or in connection to my channel are ... HIGH STAKES BIG WIN 500X or HAS LUCK RUN OUT at Mr Green Online Casino ... Amazing Bonus on Razor Shark - €5 Bet! - Duration ... Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube. How To Get $1,000,000 Bonus Cash In GTA 5 Online, Criminal Starter Pack & Premium Edition For FREE! Cheap GTA 5 Shark Cards & More Games: https://www.g2a.com... Mr Green Online Casino! - Duration: ... TOP ONLINE CASINO BONUS No views. New; 1:58. How To Play & Win Jacks or Better ... Best No Deposit Casino Welcome Bonuses - Top 5 No Deposit Casinos ... 💰 Visit https://fruityslots.com/top-casinos/ for our recommended casinos this month! Absolutely incredible hit on blueprints new Temple Of Treasure Megaways...
Copyright © 2024 top.tabking.online