BBO,ACBL, and the C word acbl hearings
#1
Posted 2020-October-12, 10:53
https://www.acbl.org...earing-reports/
it was interesting almost all have occurred since we started more online activity during covid crisis.
#2
Posted 2020-October-12, 12:23
#3
Posted 2020-October-12, 12:49
#4
Posted 2020-October-13, 22:18
In August it announced: "As reported in this month’s English Bridge an EBU Disciplinary Committee recently considered charges against [name given in original] under paragraph 3.2(iv) of the EBU Disciplinary Rules, for unfair or dishonest play and imposed a sanction on him of a two-year ban from participation in EBU competitions.
This arose from a number of online sessions on the Bridgebase Online (BBO) platform between March and June 2020 where he was aware of the layout of the hands when playing. This was achieved by ‘self-kibitzing’: when playing under one BBO username, he was watching the sessions logged in under a different username, and could thereby see all four hands."
#5
Posted 2020-October-14, 06:00
pigpenz, on 2020-October-12, 10:53, said:
https://www.acbl.org...earing-reports/
it was interesting almost all have occurred since we started more online activity during covid crisis.
Well, yes. In live play cheating is virtually always collusive. How would you or your partners react if asked to create a system of cheating? But in BBO you can do it by yourself.
#6
Posted 2020-October-14, 09:01
Douglas43, on 2020-October-13, 22:18, said:
This arose from a number of online sessions on the Bridgebase Online (BBO) platform between March and June 2020 where he was aware of the layout of the hands when playing. This was achieved by ‘self-kibitzing’: when playing under one BBO username, he was watching the sessions logged in under a different username, and could thereby see all four hands."
It seems ingenuous of EBU to permit kibitzing of sessions, however. Or is there some bug/bypass that enables self-kibitzing even when the Director has specified no kibitzing for the tournament?
#7
Posted 2020-October-14, 09:13
Vampyr, on 2020-October-14, 06:00, said:
I agree that collusive cheating requires considerably more determination and premeditation, plus the hurdle that partner must also be so aligned.
I don't agree that in live play cheating is virtually always collusive, however. Precisely because there are many people prepared to cheat alone but not collusively I think the former type of cheating is predominant. Luckily I have not encountered (or at least recognised) many pairs cheating collusively, unless you count much coffee-housing under that term: but I have a fair list of individuals who will frequently enter the wrong score to their advantage, listen for the contract and score at another table, etc.
#8
Posted 2020-October-14, 13:10
- deliberate coffeehousing
- deliberate use of UI from partner, knowing (having been penalized for the same use before) that it's not legal
- cold-decking or otherwise manipulating deals (Okay, this is ACBL-only, nobody else deals cards any more)
- gaining access to hand records
- attempting to overhear tables, or the "check scorecards while going for coffee" gambit
- ...
I don't know where you put "deliberate passing of UI, expecting partner to get it" like staring at partner when giving a signal partner is supposed to notice, or looking at partner expectantly when playing a card looking for confirmation they're still on the right track, or variations in bidding, or... I think a lot of that is deliberate on the player's part and "not noticed" on partner's; I'm sure they haven't discussed it.
Much as I hate it, I don't consider WeaSeL (over preempts, or over unAnnounced NTs) to be cheating. For me, it has to be deliberate, and knowledgeable of its wrongness; as I frequently say, WeaSeL is one of the few conventions that works better if the players don't know they're playing it - they just act and react correctly naturally.
#9
Posted 2020-October-16, 14:12
pigpenz, on 2020-October-12, 10:53, said:
What's so interesting about that? The amount of online play has increased dramatically. And before this, the national bridge organizations had almost no interest in investigating online cheating or sanctioning players who were caught.
#11
Posted 2020-October-19, 09:00
pescetom, on 2020-October-14, 09:01, said:
We don't. Some of our clubs do though and some people setting up their own matches for leagues do even though it is against the regulations. Note that in the case reported, none of the games he played were run by the EBU.
London UK
#12
Posted 2020-October-19, 10:41
gordontd, on 2020-October-19, 09:00, said:
Thanks for the clarification, it did seem odd.
#13
Posted 2020-October-24, 16:24
Are all the people who play on bbo dead?
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean