There was a meeting today of the FIDE Anti-Cheating Committee. The special guests were IA/FST/IO Israel Gelfer (ISR), the IM and Associate Professor of Computer Science and Engineering of Buffalo University, Kenneth W. Regan (USA), ACP Board Director, Yuri Garrett (ITA), GM Konstantin Landa (RUS) and IA Laurent Freyd (FRA).
Because it deals with the future of chess, I have transcribed the whole interview between Sergei Tiviakov and Yuri Garrett. They were joined at the end by Konstantin Landa. The video is near the start of the Round Nine, Paris Grand Prix recording.
Yuri Garrett is an International Organizer, born in 1969, with no rating. He speaks quite fluent English with an American accent. He is a flamboyant, enthusiastic and persuasive speaker. The interview lasted about one hour.
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Interview with Sergei Tiviakov and Yuri Garrett
Elancourt, France
Wednesday, October 2, 2013
Sergei – Most of people connected with chess know Yuri Garrett very well. I have known him for years and he plays a very important role in modern chess. He is the organizer of numerous Italian chess tournaments. I have played in tournaments organized by him. He is also the owner of a chess-publishing house in Rome, producing many interesting chess books. He is also the manager of many Italian and international players. At the moment he is a member of the board of the Association of Chess Professionals. The latest thing he is busy with is being a member of the Anti-Cheating Committee with FIDE. Cheating in chess has become a very serious and important problem.
Yuri – Our committee was just tackling cheating in the other room. Cheating is a major problem and obstacle to chess today. It is undermining our credibility and stability. For this reason FIDE and the ACP teamed up and we are working very hard on the problem.
Cheating has always occurred, not only in chess but also in everything, and it evolves. We cannot devise a system to beat cheating as it is today, because it will be old tomorrow. Therefore, we are working hard to devise a framework, whereby we will combine a series of tests of empowerment actions and start tackling cheating.
Sergei – When was the Anti-Cheating Commission established?
Yuri – In the last six months.
We are trying to combine physical and statistical evidence. We shall provide arbiters with changes in the regulations so they will have more powers. Arbiters will have to undergo extra training, so they will have more skills and take a more proactive stance. We are used to having an arbiter sitting in a room behind a computer, more or less overseeing the room, waiting for something to happen. This can no longer be. An arbiter has to be more and more like a ref in football, roaming the field in search of offensive behavior, so to speak. Also, he has to be empowered like in football.
There will be changes to the laws of chess. When you are playing chess, you are not out there in the world. You are in a regulated activity as in football. There is special attire in football because there are special regulations.
It is reasonable to say that in the laws of chess, there will be a change in the regulations in searching powers for arbiters. To what extent it is difficult to say.
Sergei – Isn’t it easier to just forbid all electronic devices in the playing hall?
Yuri – No. In chess, we have not only Olympiads but also amateur tournaments. In the latter, people come from the office, say, and they come with their laptops, cameras, watches and mobiles with them. We cannot ask everyone to leave them all behind. That won’t work. The point is finding a way that the player who comes into the playing hall with these devices is not allowed to use them. We have found a few systems, which are under debate to solve this. We will probably have different tiers of regulations – one for top tournaments with professionals and another for amateurs.
For top tournaments there are sponsors, a big budget etc and we can have serious control. You cannot ask a small organizer to have a safe, scanners and scramblers and all these things because these things will impact his budget severely. We can recommend their use and it now becomes a market issue. If an organizer can provide a locker for free for each player where you can put your devices and take your key with you – he wins in the market. He is offering an extra service. But a small organizer who cannot afford them cannot be forced to do this.
Sergei – There were cases recently of people using a computer in the washroom but there was no punishment.
Yuri – If you don’t have a regulation in place then there is no sanction. We are establishing these regulations now. If you have a regulation saying you cannot send a text message from your iPhone and you go ahead and do this anyway, well, you lose your game. The laws will be very clear and if you break them, there will be sanctions.
Sanctions need not be hard, they just have to be just. We all know that people around the world have lost a game because their mobile phone rang. None of these were a cheater. These were people who had a simple distraction. In some cases they had turned their phones off and they just popped on for no reason at all. They are electronic devices and they err. They beeped. Innocent people have suffered. In my view I would empower the arbiters more and forget the rules of the ring. It rings, yes, let’s talk about it. Taking an iPad into the toilet and using it is completely different.
Questioner – How bad is the problem?
Yuri – It is as bad as you can imagine because it threatens chess in perception and undermines it at the core. It is not a question of the number of instances. It is the whole concept that cheating can occur that undermines the sport. We want to block this thing.
In regulations, the playing area is defined and made clear to every player. The arbiter should make explain this, the boundary and limits and then post the information. The problem is the law only says that you are not supposed to leave the playing area. There is no sanction. Let’s add the sanction, if you leave the playing area, you are disqualified.
Another case is of other people passing information to the players. The arbiter must move around. They will have to walk.
Sergei – What about a 200-player open tournament with two arbiters?
Yuri – There is a wrong ratio there. We should increase the number of arbiters. It is clear that the ratio should not be 1 to 100.
The Golden Age of Chess supposedly was in the 50s with Bronstein, Botvinnik etc. Still, you had to wait months to get reports. Today, the Internet has changed all of that – live reports, live commentators, bulletins. This is all for free but at some point we are going to have to charge for these to promote chess. Fifty cents for a whole tournament would make a lot of money for chess. Here Sergei has a cost, the cameras have a cost, and the tournament facilities have a cost. We haven’t found a way to collect the fifty cents. It would help so many problems if we could. Maybe we should open an account and people can start sending in their fifty cents.
Sergei - When do we get the new anti-cheating regulations?
Yuri – They should be passed by the next General Assembly at the Olympiad in Tromso (in ten months). We have to amend the Laws of Chess and this can only done in the General Assembly otherwise we would be finished in a couple of months.
In the regulation, Professor Kenneth Regan has introduced statistical concepts, which will be one of the elements for detecting cheating. If you show a deviation from your expected play that it is highly unlikely with normal happenings, you will be disqualified. The system will be accepted by the international scientific community and will be able to stand up in court.
The ACP now represents all people, who make their living by chess, including players, organizers, chess journalists and reporters and arbiters.
Cheating has evolved very fast. There are more and more instances of cheating. When Professor Reagan started his studies, most accusations of cheating were just witch-hunting. Then, he caught cheaters. Now it is becoming technical. You can buy a small computer and hide one in your toe. It will become slightly hot and you may get cancer. But you will win your game. You can control it with a remote sensor on your thigh and with isometric contractions, you can give signals to it.
It is difficult to have implanted chips. It is not easy to have a chip in your ear and communicate through it. In 2020 this may be possible. This is why we are using the statistical approach. If Sergei plays like Carlsen for a week, that is O.K. If I play like Carlsen for a day, that is highly suspicious because of the level I started at. I probably had aid even if you haven’t caught me using a laptop. This is why the statistical evidence is just one of the elements we use. We have many elements not only the statistical one.
+++++++++
I think this interview raises many important questions about tournament organization, costs and responsibility, personal freedoms and so forth. The light-hearted discussion of cancer from implants etc did jar a little. I’d be interested in hearing other takes on the interview.
Because it deals with the future of chess, I have transcribed the whole interview between Sergei Tiviakov and Yuri Garrett. They were joined at the end by Konstantin Landa. The video is near the start of the Round Nine, Paris Grand Prix recording.
Yuri Garrett is an International Organizer, born in 1969, with no rating. He speaks quite fluent English with an American accent. He is a flamboyant, enthusiastic and persuasive speaker. The interview lasted about one hour.
+++++++++++++
Interview with Sergei Tiviakov and Yuri Garrett
Elancourt, France
Wednesday, October 2, 2013
Sergei – Most of people connected with chess know Yuri Garrett very well. I have known him for years and he plays a very important role in modern chess. He is the organizer of numerous Italian chess tournaments. I have played in tournaments organized by him. He is also the owner of a chess-publishing house in Rome, producing many interesting chess books. He is also the manager of many Italian and international players. At the moment he is a member of the board of the Association of Chess Professionals. The latest thing he is busy with is being a member of the Anti-Cheating Committee with FIDE. Cheating in chess has become a very serious and important problem.
Yuri – Our committee was just tackling cheating in the other room. Cheating is a major problem and obstacle to chess today. It is undermining our credibility and stability. For this reason FIDE and the ACP teamed up and we are working very hard on the problem.
Cheating has always occurred, not only in chess but also in everything, and it evolves. We cannot devise a system to beat cheating as it is today, because it will be old tomorrow. Therefore, we are working hard to devise a framework, whereby we will combine a series of tests of empowerment actions and start tackling cheating.
Sergei – When was the Anti-Cheating Commission established?
Yuri – In the last six months.
We are trying to combine physical and statistical evidence. We shall provide arbiters with changes in the regulations so they will have more powers. Arbiters will have to undergo extra training, so they will have more skills and take a more proactive stance. We are used to having an arbiter sitting in a room behind a computer, more or less overseeing the room, waiting for something to happen. This can no longer be. An arbiter has to be more and more like a ref in football, roaming the field in search of offensive behavior, so to speak. Also, he has to be empowered like in football.
There will be changes to the laws of chess. When you are playing chess, you are not out there in the world. You are in a regulated activity as in football. There is special attire in football because there are special regulations.
It is reasonable to say that in the laws of chess, there will be a change in the regulations in searching powers for arbiters. To what extent it is difficult to say.
Sergei – Isn’t it easier to just forbid all electronic devices in the playing hall?
Yuri – No. In chess, we have not only Olympiads but also amateur tournaments. In the latter, people come from the office, say, and they come with their laptops, cameras, watches and mobiles with them. We cannot ask everyone to leave them all behind. That won’t work. The point is finding a way that the player who comes into the playing hall with these devices is not allowed to use them. We have found a few systems, which are under debate to solve this. We will probably have different tiers of regulations – one for top tournaments with professionals and another for amateurs.
For top tournaments there are sponsors, a big budget etc and we can have serious control. You cannot ask a small organizer to have a safe, scanners and scramblers and all these things because these things will impact his budget severely. We can recommend their use and it now becomes a market issue. If an organizer can provide a locker for free for each player where you can put your devices and take your key with you – he wins in the market. He is offering an extra service. But a small organizer who cannot afford them cannot be forced to do this.
Sergei – There were cases recently of people using a computer in the washroom but there was no punishment.
Yuri – If you don’t have a regulation in place then there is no sanction. We are establishing these regulations now. If you have a regulation saying you cannot send a text message from your iPhone and you go ahead and do this anyway, well, you lose your game. The laws will be very clear and if you break them, there will be sanctions.
Sanctions need not be hard, they just have to be just. We all know that people around the world have lost a game because their mobile phone rang. None of these were a cheater. These were people who had a simple distraction. In some cases they had turned their phones off and they just popped on for no reason at all. They are electronic devices and they err. They beeped. Innocent people have suffered. In my view I would empower the arbiters more and forget the rules of the ring. It rings, yes, let’s talk about it. Taking an iPad into the toilet and using it is completely different.
Questioner – How bad is the problem?
Yuri – It is as bad as you can imagine because it threatens chess in perception and undermines it at the core. It is not a question of the number of instances. It is the whole concept that cheating can occur that undermines the sport. We want to block this thing.
In regulations, the playing area is defined and made clear to every player. The arbiter should make explain this, the boundary and limits and then post the information. The problem is the law only says that you are not supposed to leave the playing area. There is no sanction. Let’s add the sanction, if you leave the playing area, you are disqualified.
Another case is of other people passing information to the players. The arbiter must move around. They will have to walk.
Sergei – What about a 200-player open tournament with two arbiters?
Yuri – There is a wrong ratio there. We should increase the number of arbiters. It is clear that the ratio should not be 1 to 100.
The Golden Age of Chess supposedly was in the 50s with Bronstein, Botvinnik etc. Still, you had to wait months to get reports. Today, the Internet has changed all of that – live reports, live commentators, bulletins. This is all for free but at some point we are going to have to charge for these to promote chess. Fifty cents for a whole tournament would make a lot of money for chess. Here Sergei has a cost, the cameras have a cost, and the tournament facilities have a cost. We haven’t found a way to collect the fifty cents. It would help so many problems if we could. Maybe we should open an account and people can start sending in their fifty cents.
Sergei - When do we get the new anti-cheating regulations?
Yuri – They should be passed by the next General Assembly at the Olympiad in Tromso (in ten months). We have to amend the Laws of Chess and this can only done in the General Assembly otherwise we would be finished in a couple of months.
In the regulation, Professor Kenneth Regan has introduced statistical concepts, which will be one of the elements for detecting cheating. If you show a deviation from your expected play that it is highly unlikely with normal happenings, you will be disqualified. The system will be accepted by the international scientific community and will be able to stand up in court.
The ACP now represents all people, who make their living by chess, including players, organizers, chess journalists and reporters and arbiters.
Cheating has evolved very fast. There are more and more instances of cheating. When Professor Reagan started his studies, most accusations of cheating were just witch-hunting. Then, he caught cheaters. Now it is becoming technical. You can buy a small computer and hide one in your toe. It will become slightly hot and you may get cancer. But you will win your game. You can control it with a remote sensor on your thigh and with isometric contractions, you can give signals to it.
It is difficult to have implanted chips. It is not easy to have a chip in your ear and communicate through it. In 2020 this may be possible. This is why we are using the statistical approach. If Sergei plays like Carlsen for a week, that is O.K. If I play like Carlsen for a day, that is highly suspicious because of the level I started at. I probably had aid even if you haven’t caught me using a laptop. This is why the statistical evidence is just one of the elements we use. We have many elements not only the statistical one.
+++++++++
I think this interview raises many important questions about tournament organization, costs and responsibility, personal freedoms and so forth. The light-hearted discussion of cancer from implants etc did jar a little. I’d be interested in hearing other takes on the interview.
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