JackpotCapital.com Invites Players Behind the Scenes — Additional Bonuses Available at the Online Casino’s Facebook Page

 JackpotCapital.com is inviting their players to come behind the scenes and get to know the staff. Earning points by depositing and playing as they normally would, players are introduced to the staff beginning with the Customer Service and VIP Player teams and progressing, ultimately, to the Casino Manager’s office. Everyone that makes it to the boss’ office by the end of the month will be entered into a draw for a cash bonus.

“We take every opportunity to get to know our players,” said Casino Manager Oliver Smith. “Our Customer Service and VIP Player staff are in constant contact with them, and we also interact with many of them on Facebook. Since we know them so well, we thought we’d give them a chance to get to know the people behind the scenes at the casino they love so much.”

By participating in the Meet the Staff contest, players will get to know personally the team that makes sure they get paid promptly, the team that comes up with the US-friendly casino‘s unique promotions, and even the IT people who make sure every click works like it should.

Players accumulate points while playing their favorite games. The accumulation of points will take the player on a virtual tour through the Jackpot Capital office, moving them from station to station, department to department, employee to employee until they reach the office of the Casino Manager. Players who make it to Station 9, The Casino Manager, will be automatically entered into the month-end Top Players Draw for a valuable bonus prize.

The staff members that players are introduced to this week are Jessica in the Payment Dept. and George in the Security and Risk Dept. Just by entering their names as the coupon code (GEORGE) when making a deposit players get a 50% bonus (up to $100).

Jackpot Capital’s Facebook Friends will find related quizzes and contests giving them even more opportunities to get to know Jackpot Capital and earn additional bonus offers on the casino’s Facebook Fan Page.

Further information is available at the interactive office where players can also monitor their progress in the game: http://promotions.jackpotcapital.com/meet_jackpotcapital

JackpotCapital.com is home to the biggest progressive jackpots available online to US players. At over $1.6 million, the Jackpot Pinatas jackpot is the largest jackpot available, but two other jackpots have also reached seven-figures. The Aztec’s Millions jackpot and the jackpot tied to both the Mid-Life Crisis and Shopping Spree slots are all well over $1 million.

ENDS
Media Inquiries:
Larry Colcy, Lyceum Media
+44 (0)207 976 6469
larry@lyceummedia.com

About JackpotCapital.com
JackpotCapital.com Online Casino offers over 300 exciting games, including many Progressive Jackpots such as Caribbean Hold’em, Mid-Life Crisis, Shopping Spree and Light Speed. Every casino game comprises state-of-the art graphics and sound to provide a unique gaming experience. Instant-play Flash versions are available for most games. With its variety of deposit options, JackpotCapital.com is capable of serving players from all over the world including the United States.

What a Tangled Social Networking Web We Weave

Facebook is the most popular social networking site on the Internet, helping users to reconnect with old friends and family and helping them make new friends. Facebook is also an increasingly popular and effective tool in divorce cases.

According to a survey of its members by the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers, more than 80 percent of divorce attorneys have seen an increase in cases involving evidence obtained from social networking in the past five years. The website providing the most evidence? Facebook, with 66 percent of the survey’s participants pointing to it as a source of useful divorce data.

Going from “LOL” to “OMG”

Divorce lawyers across the country are now routinely mining the Facebook, MySpace, Twitter and other social networking accounts of the spouses of their clients for incriminating evidence. What they’re finding is evidence galore of flirtations, cheating, partying, lies about marital status, falsehoods about being parents, information about hidden income and assets – all of which can prove devastating in a family court where matters of child custody and divorce are being settled before a judge.

A New Jersey couple profiled in the Star-Ledger found Facebook complicating their custody battle when their 16-year-old daughter, while in her father’s care, posted photos on Facebook of drinking with her friends. The mother used the photo as part of an argument in court for custody of the girl, contending that the father wasn’t setting suitable limits.

In another case, a Hackensack lawyer told the newspaper of a wife who found her husband on dating sites claiming to be a single man without children – public lies, she pointed out to the judge presiding over her divorce case.

Even More Damage

The chair of the family practice division of the New Jersey Bar Association pointed out to the Star-Ledger that it’s not only friends and lawyers who see the postings of divorcing couples using Facebook to vent their feelings about each other. Their children can also read the comments, as can the friends of those kids.

When children see the vitriol spewed by their parents, they’re understandably devastated, regardless of how vindicated the parents themselves may feel about the comments.

What Legal Experts Say About Social Networking

Divorce lawyers say it’s best to leave all comments and photos about soon-to-be-ex and any girlfriends or boyfriends clients might be romancing. Don’t put anything on your Facebook page that you wouldn’t want your spouse’s lawyer to see, they advise.

Don’t brag about what a great kisser your new special friend is and don’t tell everyone about the fancy motorcycle you purchased with money you made under the table. Keep this very public information discreet, clean and above board, the family law attorneys say.

Above all, don’t delude yourself into thinking only your friends can see the information you’ve posted on your social network pages. No matter how closely held you believe the information to be, investigators (and friends of yours who are also friends of your spouse) can mine the pages and posts.

To find out how Facebook and other social networking sites can affect you in your divorce, contact a New Jersey divorce attorney.

Article provided by Goldstein & Bachman
Visit us at www.goldsteinbachman.com

How to avoid duplicate content by David Montalvo

Search engines dislike duplicate content for a few reasons. One is that major search engines such as Google, Yahoo, MSN, and Ask aim to provide searchers with a diverse cross-section of unique content, and duplicate content often results in duplicate listings that impair the searcher’s experience. Another reason is that search engines don’t want to spend the resources (bandwidth) on indexing pages that are very similar.

David Montalvo SEO

In some instances, pages containing duplicate content are filtered at the time search engine results are sorted, so there is no guarantee as to which version of a page will appear in results and which won’t. Duplicate content may even hinder some sites and web pages from getting indexed by search engines, and there are some cases in which a search engine crawler will stop indexing all of the pages of a site because it finds too many copies of the same pages under different URLs.

While content duplication is sometimes used in an attempt to manipulate search engine rankings to garner more website traffic, in most cases it occurs without ill intent on behalf of the site owner or webmaster. The following is a list of duplicate content scenarios that could be burdening your site.

Scenario #1: Ecommerce sites that include product descriptions from manufacturers, producers, and publishers

Product distribution websites often use text from the manufacturer or producer of the product as a description for the item on their own pages. With the addition of the product name, creator, manufacturer, writer, or recording artist appearing on the page, there is a considerable amount of duplicate content on pages that don’t originate from the same website. Here are some examples:

http://www.amazon.com/Sony-VGN-TXN15P-B-Notebook-Processor/dp/B000J43MR0

http://www.crowdstorm.com/Sony_VAIO_11_1_Widescreen_Notebook_PC_VGN_TXN15P_B+

2973.html

http://www.clearanceclub.com/products/6495-VAIO-VGN-TXN15P-B

http://www.provantage.com/sony-vgntxn15p-b~7SONN0UX.htm

Scenario #2: Printer-friendly pages

Many sites offer “printer friendly” versions of their content on different pages. Without the application of robots.txt disallow statements or meta “noindex” tags on these pages to keep search engines from indexing them, they may be indexed as duplicate content. See these samples:

http://www.constructionbook.com/xq/ASP/productid.5395/qx/printable_view_produ
ct.htm

http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/searchtools/item-details-print.asp?Ed

pNo=1556143&Sku=H24-PX849%20SB

Scenario #3: Websites that create session IDs

A session ID lets you create customized applications for a more personalized user experience, thus increasing the appeal of your website. A visitor to your site would be assigned a unique session ID which is either stored in a cookie on the user side or is propagated in the URL.

Websites with session IDs serve information in their URLs to track visitors as they go through the pages of that site. When search engine crawlers detect this tracking information they may index the same page several times under different URLs. A good example of this is www.staples.com.

Search engine guidelines advise you to allow bots or spiders to crawl your sites without session IDs that track their path through the site. While this technique is great for tracking individual user behavior, the access pattern of bots is entirely different. Since bots cannot always decipher URLs that look different but point to the same page, the use of session IDs may result in incomplete indexing of your site.

Scenario #4: URLs that include multiple data variables

When multiple data variables exist within a URL, this causes bots to crawl and index the same page under different URLs. Here are some examples of sites that show different data variables in their URLs.

http://www.homedepot.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?storeId=100
51&langId=-1&catalogId=10053&productId=100022126&categoryID=502813storeId=
10051

catalogId=10053
productId=100022126
categoryID=5028 http://www1.macys.com/catalog/index.ognc?CategoryID=30977&PageID=30977*1*24*-
1*-1&kw=Hugo%20Boss&LinkType=EverGreenCategoryID=30977

PageID=30977
LinkType=EverGreen

It is difficult for a search engine bot or spider to crawl the URLs listed above. If this scenario applies to your website, you may want to implement the mod-re-write server settings.

Scenario #5: Pages sharing similar elements

Some websites have elements that are very common from one page to another, such as title, meta descriptions, headings, navigation, and text that is shared sitewide. This can be a problem since bots might consider it to be duplicate content. Beware of this scenario if you own an ecommerce site that includes your brand name and information about that brand in every title on every page of your site. In addition, the use of content management systems that do not allow for distinct meta description tags to be placed on each page of a website can cause a similar dilemma.

Here are two well-known websites that use their brand names on every page:

http://www.barnesandnoble.com
http://www.officemax.com

These five scenarios represent situations in which search engine crawlers may perceive your website to have duplicate content. Although it is probably inadvertent on your part, you should take steps to resolve these issues to ensure that all of your web pages are properly indexed on the search engines.

David Montalvo is the CEO of UnReal Web Marketing LLC. He has achieved over 150,000 top 10 positions for Fortune 500 companies since 1997. UnReal Web Marketing is an Internet firm specializing in website design and development, search engine optimization (SEO), pay-per-click management (PPC), e-commerce solutions, and website analytics. In addition, we provide our clients with keyword research, SEO copywriting, link building strategies and email marketing.

The diverse talent at UnReal Web Marketing has over 50 years of combined experience in Internet marketing and web design, and has been instrumental in creating and optimizing more than 1,350 websites generating close to $82 million in sales for small to mid-sized companies throughout the United States.