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Dark Knight / Le Chevalier Noir
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Would every player be required to remove their shoes or only one player?
It's a large distraction to be constantly monitoring one player and leaves the door open for others to cheat. After all, you can't accuse 10% of the players of cheating after making a high profile case against one player.
Last edited by Gary Ruben; Thursday, 3rd October, 2013, 06:18 PM.
You don't even need to be 2600, I'm sure I could beat almost anyone in North America if I used Houdini once or twice in my games especially in the openings I play...
His performance rating after 8 rounds is 2442. Not out of line. What happened in the Dlugy game? I notice Dlugy has a win and a low performance rating.
I hated forfeits in events I've directed. They often tend to effect the final results. Ivanov ended up with a couple of low rated players in his final 2 rounds and has a chance of a decent placing if he wins. Dlugy got a cheap point.
I don't think his device (if exists) is so advanced. It only allows to enter your opponent's move and gives you a reply move. No option to enter a different move for yourself.
According to the story at the link that Kerry provided,
"We have done a little research and found that, unfortunately, there is a very low-tech way to cheat in chess: a modern Android or Apple smartphone easily fits into a shoe, and you can use your toes to send signals to the motion detector in the phone. Little wiggles will do it. Or the toe can be used to tap on the LED screen. The response of the phone would be short bursts of vibration. An app could handle the interface to a chess engine running on the device. So it is not really necessary to work out a very complicated communication system to explain how a player may be using computer assistance during a chess tournament."
What this means is that everything is on the phone: a custom app. If the user can tap on the screen to enter his opponent's move, what's to say the app also couldn't recognize a special code that means "what I enter next isn't my opponent's move, it's my move which varies from the engine recommended move".
So the phone has both the chess engine and the custom app, and the app could conceivably allow you to only make the recommended move in critical positions. In other positions, you enter a special code and then enter your replacement move. The next thing you enter would be the opponent's reply.
If this is indeed the case, then RF detection and jamming are both useless against it. Now consider what THAT means for chess. It means that taking off your shoes for inspection and testing will need to become STANDARD PROCEDURE for all rounds of all organized tournaments that wish to ensure against cheating. This, of course, is in addition to the RF jamming and detection and all the other anti-cheating measures.
And not only that, but what is to stop someone from designing special shoes with a thin cover for a compartment in the sole that contains the phone? Just looking at the shoe isn't enough, it will actually have to be tested for any such compartments in the sole.
All this because chess is so rigid it can't fathom changing rules so that engines become useless against humans for decades into the future.
Only the rushing is heard...
Onward flies the bird.
The results of the final 2 rounds are interesting. Dlugy scored a mere half point. Ivanov scored 1 1/2 points against weak opponents. They both ended up with 6.0 from 9 points. Both tied for 10th to 20th place. The event seems to have got a lot of publicity.
I don't know if the man is doing what they say. While he's playing in an event the arbiters should treat him the same as the other players.
The results of the final 2 rounds are interesting. Dlugy scored a mere half point. Ivanov scored 1 1/2 points against weak opponents. They both ended up with 6.0 from 9 points. Both tied for 10th to 20th place. The event seems to have got a lot of publicity.
I don't know if the man is doing what they say. While he's playing in an event the arbiters should treat him the same as the other players.
In the interview with Dlugy, it seemed clear that Ivanov was warned that he would forfeit the game with Dlugy if he did not comply (and that did happen) but it seemed also clear that he would also be flushed out of the tournament and that did NOT happen. No idea why - perhaps the organizers/arbiter(s) recanted on that part of the threat? I think the tournament rules permitted the proposed search (also something about whatever search for one player was to be done on the opponent too?)
If entries are going up in events where he's playing it would help explain a reluctance to toss him from the event.
If I was in contention for first place in an event and another contending player got the kind of cheap point Dlugy received I wouldn't be very happy. To tell the truth, it's not surprising to me that an American would be involved in the incident.
I don't think his device (if exists) is so advanced. It only allows to enter your opponent's move and gives you a reply move. No option to enter a different move for yourself.
The app can be even simpler than that. It is watching the game on the internet, and
beeping out at intervals the current best move. That way the program input is always
the board.
The app can be even simpler than that. It is watching the game on the internet, and
beeping out at intervals the current best move. That way the program input is always
the board.
From what I read on Internet he's playing the same when games aren't online. So the device (if exists) is working offline.
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