Using a proxy does not mean that we cannot see where you are playing from.
The only way for this statement to be true within its four corners is with some rather sophisticated browser fingerprinting/tracking.
*With that, it is
very true.
* Or with browser geolocation APIs; but those are permissioned, and I would presume that anyone trying to hide his location would not grant permission for that.I mention this not to help any miscreants, but rather, to point out that
privacy on the Web (and otherwise!) is
practically nonexistent. Yes,
every website that you visit can know who you are, where you are, and what you have been doing—if they really want to. Mostly, this is used for ad profiling, corporate data mining, and mass surveillance.
It can be avoided. Successfully avoiding it with a VPN or proxy requires considerable expertise. Tor Browser has some of that expertise built into
its design and implementation; but Tor is slow, Tor Browser breaks on many sites, and there are still some potential holes that can only be (more or less) mitigated by disabling Javascript.
Now, if anybody was wondering why I complain about Javascript, and about most of the Web being completely useless to me nowadays, here is one good reason...Also a VPN doesn't really do shit if you're being fingerprinted. It will hide your browsing from your ISP but wont hide your privacy from Google
Every which way, if you’re trying to get away with something, webs and webs and webs are not very helpful.
O, what a tangled web we weave,
When first we practise to deceive!
It is one reason why I tend to think that Betcoin.AG probably has something solid to show the mediator. There are so very many ways that they could have the evidence that they claim to have; and the types of people who do multi-accounting to cheat on sportsbet site rules are unlikely to be technical experts in privacy and security.
Anyway, the mediator will need to take a look at whatever it is.