nige1, on 2014-September-15, 19:03, said:
As well as the problem of accidental acquisition and subconscious usage of overheard information,. there is the theoretical risk that (heaven forbid!) an immoral player might deliberately eavesdrop in the hope of gaining illegal advantage. IMO, rule-simplification would reduce such dangers.
gordontd, on 2014-September-16, 01:05, said:
Which rule would you simplify, and how would it avoid such dangers?
nige1, on 2014-September-16, 06:52, said:
The law would stipulate that you "announce" the meaning of partner's calls. If possible, you would do this by pointing to the relevant explanation on your card/supplementary notes (which would then be AI to you). Also, each table would be supplied with a card containing a matrix of common meanings, to which you could point. You would have the right to switch-off opponents' "announcements"
This change wouldn't "avoid" the danger of disturbing other tables (for instance, an opponent might have poor eyesight); but it would "reduce" it. It would simplify the rules, for example: it would encourage players to complete convention-cards; there would be fewer misexplanaitons; there would no longer be any need for local alert regulations; It would remove confusion about what is alertable -- current alert regulations cause unnecessary infractions; IMO, it would speed up the game -- although others might disagree.
gordontd, on 2014-September-16, 12:05, said:
And which rule would be simplified by this?
nige1, on 2014-September-16, 17:15, said:
I alluded to some of them e.g. most local alert regulations could be binned. IMO disclosure would be simpler with fewer UI problems.
You started by saying that if we simplified the rules, the dangers of players deliberately using UI would be reduced. Since nothing that you have said since seems to back this up, I think you were just trotting out one of your little mantras.
I don't disagree with you that some rule simplification would be a good thing, but you do rather go overboard with your wild, simplistic claims.