mycroft, on 2020-October-23, 09:30, said:
"dozens". "A few". Sure, those are only the ones that are reported and investigated, but there are what, 10 000 players on BBO right now? And maybe 30 000 daily players?
The paranoia being generated is much worse than the actual cheating.
If you listen to "some Americans", *every* non-American team that has won a world championship was cheating. And a couple of the US teams that beat "some Americans", too. There is an alternative explanation for this, even if there was (or still is!) a lot of cheating going on.
And yes. I'm saying that players don't know their legal requirements (and therefore their opponents' legal requirements), and as a result, there's an awful lot of non-wilful, non-deliberate irregularities. Much of that is *education*, not enforcement. Players don't know, and we don't care to educate. "Some Americans" are proud of not knowing the Laws, and some of them are proud of "doing what they think is right" over following the Law. Not to denigrate those people, whose judgement and bridge skill is high enough that they probably are right, but there aren't many people I would put in that class, and the leaders doing it - and publicising that they do it - encourages the people who listen to or read them to do the same thing. With their less-refined judgement and lower skill, they are less likely to be "right". And the newer players learn from these people...
And the paranoia about the C-word is overshadowing any effort going into fixing this - and in fact an awful lot of "random use of UI" is being reported as "they must have a wire" or "they're deliberately passing and using information with their tempo". Which was my previous point; yes, we do have to work on actual cheating, but we really have to work on teaching people what they and their opponents shouldn't be doing. If for no other reason than "we can't call it cheating if you didn't know. Guess what? Now you know."...
Nicolas Hammond agrees with Mycroft. His analysis shows that as few as
1-5% of ordinary BBO players cheat (although, in absolute numbers, that's a lot of players).
Currently, the CAT has reported
30-50 top-level alleged on-line cheats to those who run a few high-level on-line competitions.
At the world-class level,
over the past 60 years, Nicolas Hammond's computer analysis of records shows that a few (but not all) Italian pairs cheated. Also, there were many cheating pairs from America, Britain, and other countries.
Even a few cheats wreck competition. Convicted cheats have won several world-championships. Suspected cheats have won more. Even when they don't win themselves, cheats eliminate other potential winners.
Currently in spite of their obsession with so-called "Equity", the WBF and NBOs have provided scant redress to victims of convicted cheats. Victims should be moved up the ranking lists to be awarded the places and titles, of which they were robbed by cheats. Unfortunately such a process can be crude and messy (e.g. in KO events).
But organisations should attempt to award victims some relief from damage.
MI and UI infractions are rife but I agree with Mycroft that it's wrong to blame ordinary players for carelessly flouting bridge rules. Also, judging from the the rarity of PPs and DPs, it seems nearly impossible to judge that such infractions are deliberate.
Bridge laws and regulations are so complex, subjective, and fragmented that few players read, understand, or comply with them. Another consequence is that, even in the simplest cases, with agreed facts, top directors disagree about rulings.
It would be harder to rationalize cheating if Bridge-rules were unified, simplified, and made less subjective
The game would also be more fun