wayne_lv said:
I agree that cheating is a serious problem for online bridge and only a small amount of cheating can make the game all but unplayable. Only 1 pair cheating out of 16 pairs that play a board in the Main Room is enough to spoil the results.
One pair cheating in a tournament can also spoil the results for all other pairs.
The cheating does not have to occur at YOUR table to affect your results. A pair at another table sitting in your direction and cheating - bidding and making an off odds game or slam can cost you plenty in the scoring.
heh. if you're actually paying attention to your "results" in the BBO main room you're already making a mistake. Comparing your score to the field is (with all due respect to BBO management and the good players on BBO) just plain wrong. I don't have numbers for this, but I'd guess that a quarter of the scores for each board are fouled due to stupid things like disconnects, lazy claims, lack of agreements in partnerships, misclicks, declarer/defender distraction, spite, drunkenness etc. (i am sure i left some stuff out)
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I have some suggestions that might dramatically reduce cheating.
1. Prohibit kibbing entirely in duplicate scored games ... tournaments, teams matches, open room games .. totally. If someone wishes to follow the play of another player it can be done via My Hands after the board is played. In the case of tournaments, all boards are posted and available for review shortly after the tournament is finished. Sure this is not in real time, but that is the point.
what a remarkably bad idea. let's punish the 99.9% of people that don't cheat and take away from their enjoyment. Kibbing is social, kibbing allows you to ask questions of other kibs regarding plays/bids etc that allow you to improve your own game, kibbing allows you to make fun of players (when they deserve it -- or not), kibbing allows you to ask the players about choices they made when you don't understand them, again, I'm sure I am leaving them out. Seems to me you want to turn the MBC into some sort of rigid, stuck up, unfriendly place, just like most f2f clubs seem to be, with the grumpy old men and the fierce old ladies occupying the various seats, snarling at anyone that happens to walk by.
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2. Modify the program so that the dummy CANNOT see the ops hands during the play, no matter what the settings are. The dummy guiding the declarer as to which way to finesse and when to drop stiffs is probably the most common method of cheating by "casual" cheaters. This would also put a stop to the annoying cry of the dummy to his partner to CLAIM when it is not apparent to players with less than total information that a claim is in order.
I think you are exhibiting a total lack of faith in the majority of humanity. This is almost paranoid. I do agree that it is rude for dummy to shout things like "CLAIM" or "???????????????" or such, I don't think hiding opps hands would stop this behaviour. I do have a different theory about what might be going on here, but i think i might be a little controversial and somewhat insulting to some, so i'll reserve it to myself for now.
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Ops are consistently bidding and making small percentage games and slams. Unusual leads occur often and seem to "magically" hit partner's unbid suit. An unusually high number of close doubles and redoubles that succeed.
And yes, all of these things do occur in bridge even when nobody is cheating. But not for 50 boards and definitely not for 1000 boards. I have observed records of players that never make a bad judgement call for over 1000 boards and never is that player a star player. Star players are far better than us average hackers, but they are far from perfect in judgement situations.
Are you sure they're small percentage games?
Is it possible that these are people who have a much better grasp of cardplay than bidding?
Is it possible that they are good at recognizing "the only" chance to bring in a contract and play for it?
Is it possible that you just selectively remember these low percentage games as opposed to all the other normal contracts they play?
Is it possible that they have a different idea of opening leads?
Is it possible that your auction is so revealing that it makes it clear to either lead the implied p's suit or it makes it clear that to lead one of your own suits would be suicidal?
Is it possible that they are making bids and plays that are beyond your grasp?
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If a player is suscpected of cheating, a quick trip to My Hands and a look at the past month's results for that player can often be very revealing. A win rate at IMP of 1 or more IMP per board. An average MP score of over 55% for a large number of boards is also very suspect. Most often cheaters using 2 computers will play with only one "partner". I would like to think that a screening program could be written to mine the hand archives for extreme results that could flag potential cheaters for surveillance.
I think as ben points out, scores are a function of your opponents. so if playing against "weaker" pairs is cheating... oh my...
also, there are plenty of non-starred players that are better than many of the stars, and you might not realize this. And, as has been pointed out many times in this thread -- just because you don't understand a play doesn't make it "cheating"
Now, there are ways to raise some red flags (if two players are playing from the same IP, for example) but again, that would still be an unfounded accusation and would only lead to discrimination against that pair with no obvious grounds.
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And yes, it is true that you can suspect cheating and review hundreds of hands and rarely find conclusive proof from the hand records. But patterns of consistent off odds bidding and play show one of 2 things: The player is either psychic and should not be on BBO but in Las Vegas breaking the town or that player is cheating.
BTW, since nobody has even broke one casino, let along the entire town, I can only conclude that psychic powers relating to cards does NOT EXIST.
the psychic powers, of which you seem so afraid, are most likely just superior (or perhaps inferior) hand analysis skills. Maybe they saw you fidget at the table? maybe your partner tanked before following low to a card? maybe the auction told them something that you don't realize?
anyhow. pointing fingers and calling everyone cheaters is vaguely reminiscent of Salem, MA, a few hundred years ago.