Zelandakh, on 2016-February-18, 08:51, said:
Do a google on Masachusetts lottery, perhaps adding "positive expectation" or the like. You will see that this is by no means a waste of time - when the opportunity comes up there is serious cash to be made.
The Massachusetts situation was a strange isolated case, google "Massachusetts Winfall":
http://www.huffingto..._n_1729416.html
https://slice.mit.ed...ng-the-lottery/
I believe the gist is when the lottery jackpot had reached a sufficient size, a very unusual rules quirk capping payouts and rolling down prizes to tickets matchiing fewer than all six numbers created a situation where syndicates wagering very large sums could be gambling with significant positive expectation, essentially from an overlay on the current lottery drawing granted by the losers of previous lotteries. But this game was shut down.
In most of the other lotteries, such as the multi-state Powerball, while it's theoretically possible to reach positive expectation, it hasn't happened yet and isn't likely to. This is mainly due to: 1. Taxes, and 2. Sharing jackpot with multiple winners when several people select the winning numbers.
So even in the recent "1.5 billion" Powerball, it came nowhere near positive expectation. For one thing the lump sum payout was "only" about 930 million, tax knocks that down by 40-50%. Then with the publicity of the big jackpot, the number of players seriously swell and the probability of multiple winners increases substantially. In practice 3 tickets split the money. So you end up with "only" $187 million as a winner, nowhere close to the $580 something million that the odds need for neutral EV (given that each ticket costs $2 and your odds are something like 290 million - 1 against.)
Actual positive EV situation has occurred in smaller lotteries:
http://www.forbes.co...n/#698637f7145c
But it is quite rare, and to guarantee a win by choosing all possible numbers runs into serious practical logistical concerns of how do you buy so many tickets, ensure non-duplication of numbers, working around state laws barring bulk ticket sales, etc.
So lottery is nearly always, unless you get a strange Massachusetts situation, a seriously lousy way to gamble. I don't agree with your characterization of "many cases of people making small fortunes gambling on lottery with positive EV". Only a few cases. If you want to gamble with positive EV, IMO the only realistic options are becoming very skilled at poker, sports betting, fantasy sports betting, or betting in the financial markets. The common theme among these is that you are mostly betting against other people (preferably mostly stupid people), with the house only taking a cut of the action, rather than you betting directly against the "house" which is always rigged against you. If you can bet better than the other people by a margin enough to overcome the house cut, you can become a professional gambler.