Nothing. I didn't mean any offense. I was just laughing at what you said. It was funny.
BTW, there was a very tech-savvy hacker guy who used a wireless device to scam keno in Atlantic City with a buddy.
How it worked was: his partner was down in the casino playing keno, wearing a wireless device disguised as a hearing aid. Meanwhile, he sat up in the hotel room with a laptop, calculating probabilities on the keno numbers as they came up. He would relay the most probable numbers to his friend on the casino floor, and the guy would bet on them.
They hit the jackpot after only a couple hours but when his partner tried to cash out, the casino cashier called security. After some quiet talk amongst themselves, the casino security said to return to the hotel room and they'd bring up the money. The partner went back to the room and warned him. He packed up his computer and headed straight to the airport. The casino security showed up within an hour and took his partner for interrogation, along with a floppy disk they'd found in their room.
Long story short, the partner squealed, and the two of them got busted. He was arrested getting off the plane in Nevada.
Well, it turned out that the two of them had also been scamming slot machines in Vegas for years. They were responsible for losses in the tens or maybe hundreds of thousands. The computer hacker guy had been an agent for the Nevada Gaming Board, and he'd installed trojans in the firmware code of many slot machines all over town. He reprogrammed the slot machines to pay out whenever a special sequence of coin denominations had been dropped.
He's considered to have been the most successful casino scammer in the history of Las Vegas.
But yeah, wireless communication can be used for lots of nefarious purposes.