Thezzaruz wrote:I believe in random as a theoretical concept but I'm not in any way sure that there is a natural event that has been proven to exhibit those properties.
Ok, I know I said I was done, but you guys are making this way too complicated and it's driving me crazy.

My only saving grace is that I'll respond to you, because it seems like there's only one poster in this thread that can't be saved, so why bother responding to him?
There is true randomness everywhere (including in CC); the problem here is that some of you guys are defining "random" far too narrowly. Here it is, put simply:
ran⋅dom
/ˈrændəm/
–adjective
1.proceeding, made, or occurring without definite aim, reason, or pattern: the random selection of numbers.
2.Statistics. of or characterizing a process of selection in which each item of a set has an equal probability of being chosen.
Mathematical definition: A random variable can be thought of as an unknown value that may change every time it is inspected.
And that's it! It's really just that simple. Claiming that "nothing is truly random", because if we were omnipotent and knew every variable that went into producing a "random" number it would no longer be random (or whatever the pedant viewpoint is), is addressing an entirely different question, mostly a philosophical or metaphysical one. In math, which is what is being practiced here on CC, "random" simply means random - we don't know what the next number will be. Period.
Doesn't matter if the number comes from a list. Doesn't matter if someone else is viewing that list. Doesn't matter if the list is followed sequentially every time (as long as the list is randomly generated, which it is). None of that stuff matters. All that matters is that you don't know what the next number will be. That's it. That's random.
Anyone who isn't satisfied with that common sense definition needs to get a life, seriously. And yes, the CC dice are absolutely, incontrovertibly random, and the same probabilities apply to them that we'd expect from real dice. This has been tested and demonstrated, and if you don't believe it you can install the plugin and see for yourself. That's science. CC even gets their list from random.org, for goodness sake, who uses atmospheric fluctuations of all things to guarantee truly random results. It doesn't get much more random than that!
So, Klobber is 100% wrong, no matter what he says, and I think I trust mathematicians and random.org a bit more than I trust him. That, and the fact that I've actually studied some statistics and probability courses myself, and I have a basic understanding of what I'm talking about, whereas Klobber is simply ignorant (and apparently proud of it). I sure hope no one else is falling for his psuedo-mathematical nonsense.
And THAT is truly my last reply.
