The operator of a high stakes fantasy football platform fired an Ivy League-educated employee who allegedly cheated for a player by manipulating digital timestamps, the company said.
The National Fantasy Football Championship, which hosts a slew of games each week, some with six -digit payoffs, said it was tipped off by the public about a time-bending scam that was traced to a now-former worker.
“I’m sad. I’m disappointed. I’m shocked. I’m mad. I’m so mad,” said a lengthy post this week by NFFC founder Greg Ambrosius. “But we can never let something like this happen and we now have safeguards in place to alert multiple people if this ever happened again. Which it won’t.”
Fantasy contests typically involve participants selecting football players from a set number of positions on the field. Contest participants are awarded points for their players in categories such as rushing, passing and receiving yards and touchdowns scored.
The platform owned by SportsHub Holdings “publishes timestamps for each transaction in each of its contests” and these markers “are viewable to every participant to see for every contest,” according to Ambrosius.
Thus, the most basic and most obvious way to cheat would be by manipulating a timestamp and inserting a football player into a contestant’s lineup after that athlete had already gained big yards or scored.
“Recently, with help from reporting by a public source, we successfully revealed a post-deadline move in one of our NFFC Post-Season Hold ’Em contests that was detected and quickly confirmed, resulting in SportsHub being able to take immediate action to resolve the issue without any impact to the results of the contest,” said Ambrosius.
“As a result of its internal investigation, an employee was terminated and a contest participant has been banned from further play on our platforms,” he said.
The company did not identify the fired employee.
Ambrosius wrote at length about the fired worker, describing him as a friend who went to an Ivy League school and has been struggling with an undisclosed “demon.”
“He has been fired. His life has been ruined. His dream job is gone. He’s let everyone down,” according to Ambrosius. “He’s let his kids, who he loves more than anything in this world, down. He let his wife, who he has been with since high school, down.”
The platform founder said he texted the fired employee on Wednesday to “tell him that we all loved him and we all wanted to help him” but there was no immediate response.
“I heard that he wanted to reach out to me but just couldn’t do it. He was so ashamed of what he did, so embarrassed that he couldn’t talk to me,” Ambrosius wrote. “I had just talked with him on Sunday and we talked about the Packers’ loss. Little did I know that would be the easiest loss of the weekend.”
Ambrosius could not be immediately reached for comment on Friday.
Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com