You might want to full-screen the video to see it more clearly.

Basically it's a solver which scrapes the screen on the first computer, then runs the analysis on a second computer (and displays the info there), so it's tougher for sites to detect. It does the solving on every street, and even gives you the percentages of the time you should do each thing, thus allowing your play to mix up. The "% of the time do this, % of the time do that" on the exact same decision is how bots manage to make themselves unpredictable and difficult to read. Otherwise, could players could figure out their patterns and beat them. The user has to operate the mouse on the first computer to actually do that play (using the advice from the second computer). This isn't an independent bot you can just leave running by itself, but that's by design.

Here's a 2+2 post from mid-June from someone who believes he found a ring of players on 888 using this software:
https://forumserver.twoplustwo.com/2...poker-1772229/

Laughably the guy on 2+2 was shouted down because he's a Russian dataminer, and they are upset he is mining play data for so many opponents which allowed him to discover this scheme. Dumb. Talk about misplaced anger.

Anyway, notice the video shows the cheater playing microlimits, AND you can see his screen name (on GGPoker, where this is demonstrated). It's possible this was just a throwaway account for this purpose, hence the microlimits and not being afraid of exposing the name.

Anyway, this is something to be aware of, regarding online poker. This is equivalent of a bot, even if it's a human operating the mouse.