mike777 Posted April 16, 2007 Author Report Share Posted April 16, 2007 I also miss being able to kibitz. I can only assume that BBO gets alot more complaints or even finds more evidence of "self cheating" that they felt the need to impose this. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
glen Posted April 16, 2007 Report Share Posted April 16, 2007 Even though it will be hard to program, I would love to see BBO with a time-delay kibitz feature, which would be useful for the tourneys as well as the vugraphs. The delay time would be 10 minutes or so (could be set by host), and, for the vugraph presentations, the commentators would see things at the same time as the rest of the audience. In other features, if the number of kibitzers at a table is greater than 10, chat by non-players at the table should default to the gallery, and not to the table. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
inquiry Posted April 16, 2007 Report Share Posted April 16, 2007 Even though it will be hard to program, I would love to see BBO with a time-delay kibitz feature, which would be useful for the tourneys as well as the vugraphs. The delay time would be 10 minutes or so (could be set by host), and, for the vugraph presentations, the commentators would see things at the same time as the rest of the audience. In other features, if the number of kibitzers at a table is greater than 10, chat by non-players at the table should default to the gallery, and not to the table. With the 10 minute delayed before the kibitzers see anything, comments to the table would confuse the players.. the hand etc will long be gone. In fact the tourney maybe over and the players have left the building.... :) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
glen Posted April 16, 2007 Report Share Posted April 16, 2007 In events with time delay, there is no chat to the table - vugraph commentators will chat only with the audience, and in tourneys, players will be left to their own talk and that of the TD. The "other features" was for tables not time delayed, like the JEC events. Also if one goes to work to provide a time-delayed feature, it would be useful if TDs, when at a particular table, could decide to view a short rewind of the latest table action and chat. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
aloman Posted April 18, 2007 Report Share Posted April 18, 2007 I think the kibitzers should be not allowed at ACBL games. I have played some ACBL tourneys and I found many cheaters. In the most cases it was "selfkibitzing". You will ask "How did you recognized the cheater?" Easy. The player plays always briliant. He finds very unusual ways to make/turn down the game. The kibitzer is often invisible, no info at his profile, or from "exotic" location. The kibitzer follows the player till the end of the tourney. What about if we disallow kibitzing from the same IP? I can tell you, that there is a way to run the BBO program as many times, as you want at the same PC. For understandable reason, I will not tell you how to do, please dont ask. There is a easy way to change the IP adress too. The kibitzer could be displayed as logged in from the opposite side of the world.Why the players cheat? Playing ACBL games your compete for ACBL and BBO masterpoints. There are haughty persons, who want to be always the best. They will accept any way, good or bad, to increase their symobl at the profile.Why the cheaters are bad for the other players? We all play bridge for fun. The winning is a part of the game and it's a motivation to play again and again. If I play well and a cheater takes my first place, it will be a disappointment for me. I will never play, knowing I will never win. Dont forget, that the players pay entry fee. Its important too.I am a TD here from long time and I run tourneys with entry fee too. The cheaters are harmful for all. They find a way to cheat even at indys with no kibitzers. We all must find some way to decrease the number of the cheaters at BBO. So I appreciate this decission and ACBL won one more player :blink: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
the hog Posted April 18, 2007 Report Share Posted April 18, 2007 "We all play bridge for fun." "The winning is a part of the game and it's a motivation to play again and again. If I play well and a cheater takes my first place, it will be a disappointment for me. I will never play, knowing I will never win." So you are really saying you don't play for fun after all. Winning is more important than personal satisfaction for you. How sad! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
1eyedjack Posted April 18, 2007 Report Share Posted April 18, 2007 Heh, I don't know why, and it is not relevant to the thread, but this reminds me of a cartoon in the paper I saw a few weeks ago: Son, to father: "Dad, why do we need to buy Trident [nuclear defence system]?" Father: "It's not about winning, son. It's about taking part." Well, it tickled me. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
aloman Posted April 18, 2007 Report Share Posted April 18, 2007 So you are really saying you don't play for fun after all. Winning is more important than personal satisfaction for you. How sad! Yes. When I sith down to play, I want to win. Or perhaps you sit down to lose? If I play well I'll win and that is the satisfaction. This is a sport and the goal is to win, but win fair. Then only the FUN is real. Just imagine, your opponents know all four hands, and you know your hand only. Your chance to win is zero and where is your fun? Maybe you dont understand, that the problem is very serious. The statement " Let the cheaters to cheat" is unacceptable at the current situation, because the percentage of the cheaters is very large and grows. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mike777 Posted April 18, 2007 Author Report Share Posted April 18, 2007 I think the kibitzers should be not allowed at ACBL games. I have played some ACBL tourneys and I found many cheaters. In the most cases it was "selfkibitzing". You will ask "How did you recognized the cheater?" Easy. The player plays always briliant. He finds very unusual ways to make/turn down the game. The kibitzer is often invisible, no info at his profile, or from "exotic" location. The kibitzer follows the player till the end of the tourney. What about if we disallow kibitzing from the same IP? I can tell you, that there is a way to run the BBO program as many times, as you want at the same PC. For understandable reason, I will not tell you how to do, please dont ask. There is a easy way to change the IP adress too. The kibitzer could be displayed as logged in from the opposite side of the world.Why the players cheat? Playing ACBL games your compete for ACBL and BBO masterpoints. There are haughty persons, who want to be always the best. They will accept any way, good or bad, to increase their symobl at the profile.Why the cheaters are bad for the other players? We all play bridge for fun. The winning is a part of the game and it's a motivation to play again and again. If I play well and a cheater takes my first place, it will be a disappointment for me. I will never play, knowing I will never win. Dont forget, that the players pay entry fee. Its important too.I am a TD here from long time and I run tourneys with entry fee too. The cheaters are harmful for all. They find a way to cheat even at indys with no kibitzers. We all must find some way to decrease the number of the cheaters at BBO. So I appreciate this decission and ACBL won one more player :) Wow in your ACBL games you find many players who make unusual winning plays or bids but no unusual losing plays or bids in the same tourney? I have never found one, let alone many. Interesting. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kenberg Posted April 19, 2007 Report Share Posted April 19, 2007 My experience is similar to Mike's. I have, from time to time, experienced bids or plays by opponents that I thought were really weird. If weird enough, I would look up their bids and plays for several hands during the tourney. Yep, weird. But usually not successful. I have yet to find a confirmed cheater. Has anyone checked to see what the ban has actually uncovered? Did an unusually large number of people quit playing after the ban? Or a statistically unlikely number of folks suddenly get much worse? Maybe so, but I would be surprised. Of course one cheater is one too many so I reluctantly accept the logic of the ban. I have mentioned this before, more than once, but far and away the largest ethical problem I see is hesitating during the play when there is nothing to hesitate about. I saw this with a star a while back. I was pretty sure I had the lie of the cards worked out but I led from the board, rho thought a bit and played low. Surely a star would not do this so I revised my opinion. Wrong. I know, dogs have to be let in and so on, but they often seem to need this service just as a critical play is made. I live with it, but I don't like it. With some players a hesitation is an outright denial of a holding requiring thought, so that can be useful in its way. Mostly I believe we need to work on ourselves. We all like to win but we have to respect the game. It's easy to get dragged into a lazy "everybody does it" sort of thinking. We need to do our best in play, in courtesy, and in ethics. Anyway, I am sorry to see the ban and even sorrier to hear that it is thought to be needed. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jillybean Posted April 19, 2007 Report Share Posted April 19, 2007 I have mentioned this before, more than once, but far and away the largest ethical problem I see is hesitating during the play when there is nothing to hesitate about. I saw this with a star a while back. I was pretty sure I had the lie of the cards worked out but I led from the board, rho thought a bit and played low. Surely a star would not do this so I revised my opinion. Wrong. I know, dogs have to be let in and so on, but they often seem to need this service just as a critical play is made. I live with it, but I don't like it. With some players a hesitation is an outright denial of a holding requiring thought, so that can be useful in its way.I find v breaks in tempo interesting but very challenging to deal with online. (no doubt in real life too)I have spoken with few very experienced TD’s to try to understand BIT and how to apply the relevant the laws in an online setting. The advice was all BIT must be addressed and it’s the job of the TD to look at the use of the BIT - not to rule on the BIT itself. Dog wants in, coffee is ready, brain fart, difficult decision or deliberate pause, it doesn’t matter – we must look at how the BIT was used. jb Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kenberg Posted April 21, 2007 Report Share Posted April 21, 2007 Well, yes, except. Two things. I was more referring to the case where I lead from dummy towards my KJx and on my right the guy thinks a bit and then plays low. He was thinking of rising with the queen to save me a guess? It's not a matter of his partner using the information but of him being cute. As to the usage of breaks in tempo by the breaker's partner, whatever the directors may say when chatting, nothing happens when you summon them to the table. I am not the sort who does this frequently. I have been playing online acbl tourneys for quite a while and I believe I have called three times in total. Two of the cases were, I thought, egregious. The other I thought at the time was wrong but I later changed my mind and decided it was acceptable, at least acceptable enough to not get in an uproar over. No matter, all three were a waste of effort. To the best of my knowledge no bidding, however unjustified over a tempo break, has ever been rolled back in an online acbl tournament. One of the directors told me, accurately or not, that it was their policy not to evaluate such matters. I accept this. Some things are the way they are, and you accept it or you go elsewhere. I regard the online tourneys as good fun and these quirks are a bit annoying but few things in life are perfect. I try to keep myself in line and I am pleased to say there are many others of similar disposition. That's satisfactory enough. Generally, I trust my fellow bridge player and believe the trust is warranted. It would be naive to think that no one ever takes advantage. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rbforster Posted April 21, 2007 Report Share Posted April 21, 2007 I just wanted to add my regret that I can't kibitz my friends or stars playing in online tournaments. I have never played in such a tournament, but I know I would be much more likely to in the future if I could watch or two first. I don't know if this ban is the right choice for BBO - even if there are a few "self kibitzing" cheaters spoiling the tournaments, it may be worse to punish the very large number of real kibitzers. If the cheaters are motivated by earning masterpoints, perhaps the answer is to change the business model to running cheaper/free non-sanctioned events (in which cheaters would have less interest). You could even imagine charging a small optional fee per user for the right to kibitz all live tournaments for a year. I know I would definitely pay a yearly fee to regularly watch star players competing in live tournaments. Remember, there are a lot more honest folks out there. Make sure your business model reflects that. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jmc Posted May 7, 2007 Report Share Posted May 7, 2007 A fee is an interesting idea. I am also happy to report that Okbridge still allows kibbing of its tournaments. I hadn't used my membership their in months but have been using it as a new source for kibbing tourneys. I still do not understand why kibbing but only showing the dummy is a problem. This stops self kibbing which was the main reason for the ban. Could someone explain why we cant just kib the players seeing only the dummy? jmc Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
fred Posted May 7, 2007 Report Share Posted May 7, 2007 A fee is an interesting idea. I am also happy to report that Okbridge still allows kibbing of its tournaments. I hadn't used my membership their in months but have been using it as a new source for kibbing tourneys. I still do not understand why kibbing but only showing the dummy is a problem. This stops self kibbing which was the main reason for the ban. Could someone explain why we cant just kib the players seeing only the dummy? jmc In order to force kibitzers to see only the dummy some software changes would be required. While it would not be difficult for us to make the necessary software changes, it would be necessary for people to download a new version of BBO in order for the changes to take effect. There is no way we are going to force 100,000s of people to download a new version of BBO for the sake of a new feature like this. Making the new program a voluntary download for people who want to kibitz the dummy in ACBL tournaments is an option, but there would be additional complications in handling things this way. For me personally I cannot imagine that seeing none of the hands during the bidding and only the dummy during the play would be a satisfying experience. If enough of our regular ACBL players feel differently about this and let me know (via either forums posts or e-mail) then I will reconsider your suggestion. Fred GitelmanBridge Base Inc.www.bridgebase.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jmc Posted May 8, 2007 Report Share Posted May 8, 2007 Thanks for the response. I understand that software changes are non-trivial. It would be worth it to me, but I understand it wouldn't be to many. Thanks for the information. jmc Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jtfanclub Posted May 8, 2007 Report Share Posted May 8, 2007 Thanks for the response. I understand that software changes are non-trivial. It would be worth it to me, but I understand it wouldn't be to many. Thanks for the information. jmc It would be worth it to me as well. One reason is simply that I have a tournament coming up in 10 minutes. My to-be partner is playing in the ACBL tourney. If he's on the last board, I'll stay with him, otherwise I'll withdraw and get another partner or let somebody else take the slot. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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