Jolly Lock IP Review

Lay Back & Get Rich betting system review

I’m kicking off a trial today about something quite different from the usual services I test.

Quite simply, it’s a product designed to help you preserve your bookie accounts for longer.

Potentially much longer.

As such, it may hold serious appeal for a lot of my readers. As the number 1 issue they raise is the pain of having accounts limited or closed entirely by over-zealous bookmakers.

It’s quite clear that a solution to this problem is being sought by many. And it’s just possible that this product provides a big part of the answer.

Welcome then to my trial of Jolly Lock IP…..

Jolly Lock IP
Jolly Lock IP

There is a serious back story here that boils down to one thing.

It is extremely likely that the bookies are spying on you.

There are lots of claims flying around about exactly how they are doing this… with a piece of software called IESnare being the most commonly cited culprit.

Now, this is a particular issue if you are a user of Matched Betting software such as OddsMonkey or Profit Maximiser. As your entire source of regular income could, any day, be jeopardised by a digital encounter with a few inquisitive bookmakers.

So… how does Jolly Lock IP aim to help you fight back?

Well, the basic idea is very simple.

Jolly Lock provides you with a virtual desktop in the ‘cloud’ (i.e. somewhere else on the internet) that you log into your accounts from. This environment is created as and when you need it and is designed to be completely free of nasty virtual spies.

As I understand it, this is absolutely not the same thing as just using a virtual IP address.  Your new virtual desktop is created ‘out of thin air’ every time you log in.

So nobody should be able to see what you’re doing… nor will they be able to use that insight to curtail your matched betting enterprise.

I absolutely love the concept… and if it works, there could be a queue down the street to get involved.

Summary

I can’t wait to give this a whirl.

I cannot prove that use of virtual desktop software will save your bookmaker accounts but I have a real hunch that it should help.

So: I intend to use the product for the next few days in order to learn more about it then return to give you my impressions of what it offers punters.

This really might be a significant moment for matched bettors everywhere. Let’s hope so.

In the meantime, if you’d like to find out more about Jolly Lock IP, you can do so here.


My First Week

If there is one problem I’d love to fix, it’s the perennial one of bookies limiting accounts.

And it’s quite clear from my postbag that I’m far from being the only punter who feels this way. It’s a regular complaint from ordinary folks who’d like to be able to use bookmaker services but feel unjustly barred from doing so.

Inevitably, the strength of such feelings has come to the attention of software entrepreneurs looking for a problem to solve.

Which brings me to one particularly promising attempt at a solution: Jolly Lock IP, which I’ve had access to for around a week so far.

So… is it any good?

Jolly Lock IP
Jolly Lock IP

I’m quite impressed so far, with a couple of caveats.

Set-up of the product is very easy and quick.

You are issued with a two-page PDF that any reasonably competent computer user should be able to follow very easily. And in just a few minutes, you find you’ve downloaded the connection software to your PC and connected to a remote machine.

You are then presented with a desktop that will look something like this:

Jolly Lock IP Desktop
Jolly Lock IP Desktop

You then connect to the internet by double-clicking the Google Chrome icon in the bottom left-hand corner. And from here, you login to your bookmaker accounts in the usual way.

I have used several bookmaker accounts with the service already.

Specifically, I have logged into: Bet365, Betfair, Betfred, Coral Sports, Corbett Sports, Ladbrokes, Skybet and William Hill.  And I’ve successfully placed bets with Coral and Skybet.

I have found the service to be easy to set up and use and the screen refresh rate to be perfectly acceptable and generally as fast as a regular PC.

So… all good then?

Well generally yes, though there has been one issue that I’ve raised with Jolly Lock.

You see, I can’t get Bet365 to work.

I managed to log in without a problem but was then unexpectedly presented with a blank screen:

Bet365 - Blank Screen
Bet365 – Blank Screen

I am unable to log out of Bet365 in order to try logging in again – and when I attempt to close my remote desktop and start again from scratch, a return to the site presents the same blank screen.

I wrote to Jolly Lock to report the problem and they responded to say they were aware of the issue, describing Bet365 as a “problem bookie“.

Their technical team are apparently working on a fix at the moment. I would suggest that this needs to be a high priority as Bet365 is a major bookmaker who offer attractive prices.

Incidentally, I have since logged into Bet365 from my PC desktop in the usual way without difficulty.

Summary

This product offers the opportunity to be able to use bookmaker accounts without fear of being watched by the bookies. And, as far as I am able to tell, the vast majority of bookmakers are happy to deal with me in this way.

My experience with Bet365, however, does bother me a bit as it suggests that they can tell I am not operating in my usual manner.

It’s not just that they think I am logged in from somewhere else – but rather it is clear that they believe I am behaving in a way that they are not entirely happy with.

I have no idea how much of a problem this is but it does underline the point that the bookies are watching us … every step of the way.

I intend to play with my Jolly Lock account for another week or so, including carrying out some matched betting, then I’ll return with my closing thoughts on the subject.

In the meantime, if you’d like to find out more about Jolly Lock IP, you can do so here.


Several Weeks Later

It’s several weeks since I first got my hands on Jolly Lock IP.

This clever bit of software basically allows you to connect to bookmaker sites with a different IP address from your own.

But it does so in a way that differs radically from traditional VPN solutions, as we’ll see below.

I wrote up my initial thoughts in mid-February, when I was still finding my way with the product.

However, a month further on, I’m ready to draw my overall conclusions.

And I have to say, I believe that Jolly Lock IP deserves your attention.

Read on to find out why…

Jolly Lock IP
Jolly Lock IP

Getting to grips with Jolly Lock IP

The first thing to say is that set-up of the product is very easy and quick.

The instructions are clear, accurate and simple, with good use of graphics and commands that actually match what happens on your screen. (Is there anything more frustrating than finding that a list of click-this-then-click-that steps doesn’t bear any resemblance to what your computer actually does?!).

Secondly, you don’t need to be a techie to use this product.

I’m anything but and had no difficulties with it. So I’m confident that any reasonably competent computer user should be comfortable getting this thing installed and working.

Thirdly, in general use, bookies seem happy enough to deal with me.

I have logged into quite a few of my bookmaker accounts without incident and placed a number of bets. I have also other features such as slots and games without a problem.

The only exception has been Bet365, who flatly refused to talk to me last time, but did seem to think I was worth doing business with when I tried a second IP this week. Indeed, I was even able to use Flash games this time, when previously I hadn’t been able to place a basic sports bet.

I have long suspected that Bet365 is the most technically advanced of the bookmaker sites — it’s certainly the richest — so it’s perhaps unsurprising, therefore, that they have been able to smell a technical rat from time to time.

Whether the other bookmakers will catch on in due course is impossible to say. For now, their sites work fine, with excellent screen refresh rates and all the usual features functioning normally.

For instance, I was able to ask Ladbrokes to remember my username. I then logged out of Jolly Lock entirely, went back in again and found that my login was still there and Ladbrokes were happy for me to sign in again.

Comparing Jolly Lock with regular VPNs

There are several important differences between the two but in practice, they all boil down to two things:

  • With Jolly Lock, you first connect to a virtual desktop in the cloud – and only once there do you fire up a browser window. A VPN, by contrast, is purely a connection, the software for which runs on your machine. With Jolly Lock, you connect to the wider internet from your remote desktop so it follows that no spyware can be loaded to your computer.
  • The IP address you are allocated is static. So, to a bookie, you appear to be in the same location every time you log in. This, I understand, is not guaranteed by a VPN.

It was easy enough to check that I was getting the same IP each time.

I simply logged into Jolly Lock, went to Google, asked it what my IP address was then logged out completely.

I then connected a second time and repeated the query – and was advised that my IP hadn’t changed.

This is different to traditional VPN’s which focus on hiding your existing IP rather than giving you a static, different one. I am even told they are not that good at concealment either, being sometimes incompatible with websites running Flash (such as casinos or slots) that may expose your desktop’s real IP. This is never a problem with Jolly Lock as you simply don’t connect to the internet from your desktop. 

The software even lets you run more than 1 IP at once. For instance, this week, I’ve been running a two-licence copy, logging into and out of each virtual desktop in parallel, and checking that each one received the same IP address every time. (cf. VPNs which, I gather, usually limit you to one IP per computer).

It follows that Jolly Lock gives you the flexibility to operate different bookie accounts via different IP addresses: though do be careful and make sure you don’t get muddled up.

You might create problems for yourself if you log in to a website with the same account from different remote IP addresses.

Summary

I’ve seen one or two websites claiming that Jolly Lock costs about the same as a VPN.

Well, it doesn’t; it’s more than twice as much.

A single licence version retails at £25 per month. In contrast, ExpressVPN charge $12.95 a month, or around £10.50.

However, that said, the two products really aren’t comparable.

Jolly Lock protects you from:

  • Malicious software being installed on your computer by a bookie
  • The risk you get a different IP address every time you log on (distinctly fishy, especially if their physical geolocations are remote!)
  • Connecting via a “contaminated” IP address that has been banned by a bookie in the past
  • Non-UK IPs
  • The risk that your desktop IP address is exposed.
  • Slow VPN connections – Jolly Lock is fast.

So the only cloud on my horizon has been my mixed experiences with Bet365. In short, sometimes Jolly Lock worked with the UK’s biggest bookie and sometimes it didn’t.

With this exception, Jolly Lock really does seem to offer a significant step forward in the fight to preserve our accounts.

In short, if the bookies can’t spy on us, we can bet with confidence.

You still have to use common sense when you place your bets, of course. There is no single panacea for trigger-happy bookies looking to limit accounts.

But Jolly Lock is a leap forward in our ability to defend ourselves against the highly questionable tactics that the bookmakers nowadays use.

As such, it therefore earns a Pass mark from me.

To find out more, and get your hands on the product, just click here.

Lucy

Leave a reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked

  1. Hi Lucy,

    I was wondering, are you still using JL IPVD? (the latest version with Bet365 now working).

    My niece is having lots of problems with it, it runs very, very, slowly, constantly freezes and crashes and always showing the ‘ah Snap’ error page when trying to play any slots or casino games. We’ve tried it on 3 different computers with the same results. All running 80mb Fibre broadband. Its almost like having a 10 year old computer again with the way its running!. Its hard and time consuming to even get a bet on.

    I have tried finding others with these or similar problems but without any luck.

    So, I was wondering if you are still using it, if so, is it still as fast as you mentioned in your review?

    Thanks in advance for any help.

    Thank you

    Kev

    1. Hey Kev

      I took the site over from Lucy quite some time ago. I haven’t used this product myself, but perhaps one of the other readers will be able to help you.

  2. Great Review

    If I am running bookies accounts for myself and 2 others, Will I be able to run all three (lets say Coral) accounts from the same computer, using a seperate JL licence for each one?

    Thank You in advance

    1. David

      The short answer to your question from David @ Jolly Lock was YES however he says he would like to understand you current set-up etc. (which bookies/exchanges, how configured, accounts etc.) If you’d like to write to [email protected], I could follow up.

      JL are just about to launch Jolly Lock IP Virtual Desktop Pro and depending on your gambling techniques at this point it is hard to say if Standard or Pro Version would be right for you. However further detail could clarify.

      Lucy

  3. I winter in Spain and find I can not access my bookies accounts. Will I be able to use Jolly Lock from overseas So the Spanish think I am In UK

    1. Hi Roy thanks for your comment. YES JL IPVD can be used anywhere and in any country, as long as you have an internet connection of course. A user is given a dedicated UK IP address so regardless of where they are when they logon the IP address will be the UK

  4. Irrespective of what Jolly vendors say, I would still check for IESnare etc. every now and then. If what they offer is a VPS, IESnare will still get through. It doesn’t mean that what blocks IESnare today will keep on working tomorrow.

    There is a lot of money behind IESnare and the likes, so be cautious.

    1. Trab,

      I think JL recognise this is a never-ending battle. Bet365, it would seem, are ahead of the pack but there are an awful lot of very untech-savvy bookies, I feel sure.

      However, yes, there is no silver bullet: but I am convinced this is an important step forward.

    2. Hi Trab, thanks for your comment and everyone is entitled to their opinion. However I will totally disagree with your comments. You are making assumptions without an in-depth technical understand of how JL IPVD works. When using JL IPVD IE Snare cannot be downloaded which has been verified by numerous sources in the gambling industry. IE Snare is just one of many tools being used by the bookies and if someone believes they have protected themselves just because they have blocked or removed the digital string, then I am afraid to say they are very much mistaken. There are many VPS services available on the market BUT none of them have been designed especially for the gambling industry . Jolly Lock is continuously monitoring what bookmakers are using unlike other companies that offer a basic VPS. Many people claim that they have a solution to stopping IE Snare but what they don’t appreciate is that the bookies are fully aware of this and many have now started using another spyware tool that has recently hit the UK. Bookies used IE Snare for a long time before it became public knowledge and likewise in about 6-12 mths the market will be a buzz regarding this new tool

  5. As I mentioned in the trial intro comments the service is more equivalent to a VPS than a VPN. Such hosting services are available with a dedicated UK IP. A quick google shows https://www.bestwebhosting.co.uk/vps-hosting.php for £9.99 a month. It would take minimal set-up to work similarly, albeit I admit requiring some basic computer knowledge initially, which is easily found online.

    Even if JollyLock is effectively ‘plug n play’ the price @ £25 a month is hard to justify.

  6. Thanks Lucy. This is a lucid and useful review of Jolly Lock – much appreciated. I won’t be too cheeky and call you Lucid Lucy!

    1. Rid,

      Thanks for the kind comments. It was such a different sort of trial that I almost gave up but I’m glad I didn’t. It’s a really worthwhile product.

      Lucy

{"email":"Email address invalid","url":"Website address invalid","required":"Required field missing"}

Related Posts

Subscribe now to get the latest updates!