By the way, you still haven't explained why you are trying to trick users on your website by displaying fake bets made by bots.
In my opinion, the answer is very simple. The casino script he bought just has a built-in bot service. Maybe he could turn it off, but why would he do it? After all, thanks to this, it inspires more confidence among inexperienced users, because they think that these winnings are real.
So, it's okay for you to display fake bets from bots and that would deceive and mislead inexperienced players? Interesting. This is exactly the sort of response you'd expect from a scam promoter like you.
What?

What I wrote is sarcasm. Read it again and maybe you'll understand.
It's also possible that he just can't turn off this bot. Someone who buys a ready script does not have to be able to change its code.
They're still responsible for their decision to use it.
Much like a user that accepts money to advertise a sportsbook that steals money from players on a regular basis (like 1xbit) does not decide how how much money the casino steals, but they are still responsible for promoting a scam.
A surprisingly brilliant comparison.

I am glad that 1xbit ad is visible, it means that the campaign is working. However, in my opinion, this is a big difference. He owns the casino, I only wear an ad in the signature space. But everyone sees what want to see.