Cheating
#1
Posted 2013-December-10, 14:41
It just seems that instant messaging/ texting/ photo transfers are so much faster and easier these days.
I'm just curious and was wondering how prevalent cheating is now compared to "before smartphones, etc " ?
TWOferBRIDGE
"imo by far in bridge the least understood concept is how to bid over a jump-shift
( 1M-1NT!-3m-?? )." ....Justin Lall
" Did someone mention relays? " .... Zelandakh
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#2
Posted 2013-December-10, 15:01
I don't see that smartphones make much difference? If I'm sitting at a computer playing BBO, then if I want to speak to someone online for whatever reason I'm going to use one of the myriad means of doing so on my computer, not fiddle around on my phone.
#3
Posted 2013-December-10, 15:26
I play in a lot of ACBL 12-board games on BBO. There is a time limit of about an hour for the 12 boards. Normally I finish the 12 boards in about 20-25 minutes, sometimes faster, but rarely more than 30 minutes (unless I get interrupted or I nod off in the middle of a game).
At the conclusion of the game, I can kibbitz the players who have yet to finish. Sometimes I find a player who has not played board 1 after 25 minutes of play. I have speculated (and I certainly have no evidence) that the player is waiting for another player to tell him what is going on on board 1 before he plays it. I would be in a position to advise such a player, having completed the boards. Furthermore, I have access to all 4 hands for each board that I played.
So, if someone wanted to cheat, and they had someone willing to help them out, it would be easy to cheat in these games.
I would hope that the powers that be are aware of this possibility and routinely monitor the results of players who do not play for the first 20-30 minutes in a tournament and then complete the boards to see if there is any correlation between late starters and unusually good results.
#4
Posted 2013-December-10, 15:33
ArtK78, on 2013-December-10, 15:26, said:
I play in a lot of ACBL 12-board games on BBO. There is a time limit of about an hour for the 12 boards. Normally I finish the 12 boards in about 20-25 minutes, sometimes faster, but rarely more than 30 minutes (unless I get interrupted or I nod off in the middle of a game).
At the conclusion of the game, I can kibbitz the players who have yet to finish. Sometimes I find a player who has not played board 1 after 25 minutes of play. I have speculated (and I certainly have no evidence) that the player is waiting for another player to tell him what is going on on board 1 before he plays it. I would be in a position to advise such a player, having completed the boards. Furthermore, I have access to all 4 hands for each board that I played.
So, if someone wanted to cheat, and they had someone willing to help them out, it would be easy to cheat in these games.
I would hope that the powers that be are aware of this possibility and routinely monitor the results of players who do not play for the first 20-30 minutes in a tournament and then complete the boards to see if there is any correlation between late starters and unusually good results.
There are other possibilities. Sometimes I'll fire a robodoop up from my desk, and before it starts, I'll get distracted by something at work. And then I'll come back 30 minutes in and speedball the rest of the tourney. More often than not, this happens midway thru since I can unreg if someone grabs me before we start, but it happens.
I agree that TPTB should monitor this type of behavior. Although I definitely do some weird things in robodoops and occasionally have some very good results, so I hope I don't get flagged!
"...we live off being battle-scarred veterans who manage to hate our opponents slightly more than we hate each other. -- Hamman, re: Wolff
#5
Posted 2013-December-10, 16:14
ArtK78, on 2013-December-10, 15:26, said:
Why would they need to wait 25-30 minutes until all the boards are played if they were cheating? Just knowing the next board to be played is enough.
#6
Posted 2013-December-10, 16:51
There is a small subset of people who are going to cheat. The BBO actively tries to find those cheating in games that cost money to play in, and to create cheat free events like robot races, ect.
#7
Posted 2013-December-10, 23:27
ArtK78, on 2013-December-10, 15:26, said:
I play in a lot of ACBL 12-board games on BBO. There is a time limit of about an hour for the 12 boards. Normally I finish the 12 boards in about 20-25 minutes, sometimes faster, but rarely more than 30 minutes (unless I get interrupted or I nod off in the middle of a game).
At the conclusion of the game, I can kibbitz the players who have yet to finish. Sometimes I find a player who has not played board 1 after 25 minutes of play. I have speculated (and I certainly have no evidence) that the player is waiting for another player to tell him what is going on on board 1 before he plays it. I would be in a position to advise such a player, having completed the boards. Furthermore, I have access to all 4 hands for each board that I played.
So, if someone wanted to cheat, and they had someone willing to help them out, it would be easy to cheat in these games.
I would hope that the powers that be are aware of this possibility and routinely monitor the results of players who do not play for the first 20-30 minutes in a tournament and then complete the boards to see if there is any correlation between late starters and unusually good results.
I sometimes fire up a tournament and then go have a shower or put away laundry or whatever and then come back an finish. I like getting more accurate barometer results and the results of the tournament right after I finish.
#8
Posted 2013-December-11, 04:22
Bridge computers don't really play so very reliably yet, whereas in backgammon and chess they play consistently better than any human, a situation that arrived a few years earlier than in backgammon than chess. There is also a difference that in bridge a sight of the opponents' cards can be worth a lot more than a skill upgrade.
#9
Posted 2013-December-11, 04:39
#10
Posted 2013-December-11, 07:52
If you chose to use this method to cheat it does not seem to be a very covert method.
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Masterminding (pron. mstr-mnding) tr. v. - Any bid made by bridge player with which partner disagrees.
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2000 years earlier: "morituri te salutant"
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#11
Posted 2013-December-11, 08:58
iviehoff, on 2013-December-11, 04:22, said:
Bridge computers don't really play so very reliably yet, whereas in backgammon and chess they play consistently better than any human, a situation that arrived a few years earlier than in backgammon than chess. There is also a difference that in bridge a sight of the opponents' cards can be worth a lot more than a skill upgrade.
I had a personal experience relating to this incident. I used to play a lot of backgammon online against some of the best players. I had some success, but I am not a truly top level player. As in bridge, there is a significant gap between the run of the mill expert and the truly elite. At the time that rumors were circulating in the backgammon online community about alleged cheating by a top player, I was at the Lancaster PA regional, playing with and sharing a room with a top online backgammon player. I remember relaxing in our room while he was on his laptop and telling me about the brewing scandal, and how a player was playing nearly perfect backgammon according to computer backgammon programs (which are quite good, by the way). I found it interesting, but I didn't really pay too much attention to it. At the time, I had already cut back on my online backgammon, so I didn't feel as much a part of the online backgammon community as I did previously.
It turned out that the cheater was, in fact, my bridge partner.
He had a history of sorts, as I found out later. He had been suspended from ACBL competition for some time for circulating through the room between rounds in pair events to obtain information about boards. Apparently, he has a personality disorder that lends itself to taking whatever edge he can get, legal or otherwise.
#12
Posted 2013-December-11, 10:47
Zelandakh, on 2013-December-11, 04:39, said:
#13
Posted 2013-December-11, 11:18
It sort of reminds of the movie "Quiz Show", about the TV game show scandal from the 1950s. I could only respond by laughing that anyone ever took a TV show so seriously to begin with. They had congressional hearings, over whether a TV show was real?!? Free online cheating feels similar. Why should I get worked up about it?
-gwnn
#14
Posted 2013-December-11, 12:09
However, I think in-ear wireless receivers have gotten small enough to be effectively invisible unless you're peering in like an otolaryngologist, and of course they could be disguised as hearing aids. In fact I'd be surprised if some players aren't already using such devices. (I don't have anyone specific in mind here, just believe that if the tech is available, inevitably someone will use it.)
#15
Posted 2013-December-11, 12:11
I am one of many that play with my spouse out of the same ip address and BBO does a great job under the circumstances. I'm pretty sure we were reported for an insanely lucky defense after an opps comment but they could see a -1100 on an insanely unlucky (or just insane) auction from the same session of play.
BBO is on the ball, all you have to do is report to abuse@bbo and they have the history at their fingertips. Cheaters are out there but they have a shelf life.
What is baby oil made of?
#16
Posted 2013-December-28, 20:21
ggwhiz, on 2013-December-11, 12:11, said:
I don't think BBO spends much resources on catching cheaters in free tournaments/team matches/MBC games.
And there are cheaters with a seemingly pretty long shelf life on BBO.