 mycroft, on 2020-October-22, 10:34, said:
mycroft, on 2020-October-22, 10:34, said:
Frequency x Damage = Risk.
Cheating isn't common.  We likely aren't even at 1% of players who deliberately, actively intend to violate the rules of the game for personal benefit.  I would have put it lower than that, but unfortunately at least at the highest levels, I've been proven wrong. ...
At International level, convicted cheats have won many recent championships.  If we believe world-class Americans, the Italian Blue Team cheated their way to a long run of World Championships. Presumably there are many less skilful cheats. 
 mycroft, on 2020-October-22, 10:34, said:
mycroft, on 2020-October-22, 10:34, said:
... The other damage to me is that it drowns out the garbage that happens everywhere, where people are getting stolen blind by tempo nonsense, the interested question, "you're right, partner, I forgot we don't play that, I need to try to survive now", "oh you forgot Drury, I'm going to have to rebid the suit so you get it", and all the rest of the stuff that people literally don't realize they're doing and even if they did realize it, don't realize how illegal it is (after all, they just "do what they would always have done").
 mycroft, on 2020-October-22, 10:34, said:
mycroft, on 2020-October-22, 10:34, said:
Therefore, even with cheating not being common, the risk cheating in bridge brings to the future of bridge is still high, and we should deal with it.  But part of "dealing with it" is downplaying the hype, while still acknowledge that there's some "there" there.
 Top level cheating seems common.  In an attempt to restore the probity of Bridge, the WBF and NBOs belatedly need to assume their responsibilities i.e.  
- Investigate and prosecute alleged cheats, in a fair and transparent way;
- Name and shame convicted cheats and confiscate their ill-gotten gains; 
- Reallocate their titles and placings to those whom they robbed.