nige1, on 2021-August-16, 05:04, said:
I agree.
It's frightening that many TDs argue otherwise.
A game is its rules
The rules of Bridge urgently need radical clarification, simplification, and unification.
Hence, by all means
, argue for sensible rule-change -- as I do.
But deliberately breaking rules, to gain advantage, is cheating.
It's easier to understand the cheating pandemic in the light of such a wide-spread top-level attitude,
I've not seen anybody arguing that bridge can't be played by the rules because it would reduce membership. What has been writen by me is, that dealing out default penalties would send a lot of players to clubs where the TD's take circumstances, including the players' quality and experience into consideration.
My experience with players that are not very good, to put it mildly, is that they break the rules almost constantly. Hesitating with a hand on the bidding cards, sighing, "I don't know" and all that is quite common and most of their opponents don't think there's anything untoward going on because they do the same. The list is almost endless and contains items you can't believe. The use of UI is standard and nobody cares. If a TD is called, usually by a somewhat better player, they think and sometimes say "We are not amused" or words with a similar meaning and have the feeling that they are accused of cheating. That's even the case if there's a revoke, which is quite often 'solved' by picking a card out of the hand and replace the revoke card with it, usually making a complete mess of the board. These people play purely for fun and don't want to be penalized or even strongly spoken to. The best you can do, if necessary, is explain what the rules are and why and keep your tone as friendly as possible.
At he top level, wherever you draw the line, the situation is quite different. Here the players should know the rules. And even there, as most of us know, it can be pretty hard to decide that there was a possible use of UI. It's just that directing isn't easy and can't be done by applying algorithms.
I don't know that there is a pandemic of cheating. There are quite a few cases of cheating online at top level. There are also some alleged cases at the Dutch online club, where members are banned for life on unclear statistical grounds, where information about validity, accuracy and reliability of the methods used (Hammond's) are not available and the methods are not published, let alone peer reviewed. If you want to ban cheating from online bridge, you have to resort to measures that most amateurs wouldn't accept like constant video monitoring.
You keep claiming that the laws need to be revised rigorously, but don't tell what should be changed, why and what it should be. You don't seem to know that over the course of decades the laws have been adapted and fine tuned to cover the irregularities as good and equitable as possible. If you simplify them to the extent that seems desirable to you, we would end with a game in which all and every mistake is punished by the bridge equivalent of "off with their heads". The Queen of Hearts would reign supreme...