Quote Originally Posted by Iwantmoney View Post
There is some mistake or fallacy here.

You see, say at a Keno draw. There MUST be a result yea or no, like it or not. Yet EACH or ANY result seems very improbable tone out of a trillion. So for ANY result of ANY Keno draw are you going to conclude since this is so improbable it’s likely cheating had occurred to have arrived at this particular result? Where did the probability go wrong in this case?
I'm not too sure what you are referring to here.

My calcs were based on what data you gave. The likeliness or not of something does not imply cheating. You need significant sampling data to draw some conclusion...or material evidence of such cheating. Like stuffing a blackjack shoe full of 5's and 6's.