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Microsoft Promises To Defend World Chess Champion From Russian Hackers (telegraph.co.uk) 131

"World chess champion Magnus Carlsen has asked Microsoft to protect him against Russian hackers, as he expects to become the target of cyber attacks launched before the match with grandmaster Sergey Karjakin next week," reports Softpedia. An anonymous reader shares more details from The Telegraph: The man dubbed the 'Mozart of chess' has spent months using high-powered chess computers to meticulously prepare moves for his grueling 12-game match against challenger Sergey Karjakin. But any leak of his analysis would hand a significant advantage to Crimean-born Karjakin, the fiercely-patriotic darling of Russian president Vladimir Putin... "The element of surprise is vitally important in chess," explained the Vibeke Hansen, from Microsoft Norway... She said Microsoft Norway will "ensure that he has a safe training environment and secure communication and collaboration tools".
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Microsoft Promises To Defend World Chess Champion From Russian Hackers

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 06, 2016 @09:16PM (#53225905)

    HAHAHAHHAAHAHAHAHAAAHAHA!!!

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 06, 2016 @09:17PM (#53225921)

    We're sick of it. We didn't believe it when the corrupt clinton campaign used it, and we don't buy it now. Repeatedly beating this dead horse is only going to turn more people against you.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Sure buddy. How many rubbles are you getting paid? Pathetic Russian hackers went after WADA because they were exposed as cheaters.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Russia ARE a boogeyman, they just hacked the Democratic party using fake servers and man in the middle attacks, sent emails though Kremlin propaganda office, and then handed over to Assange for release just prior to an election. It doesn't get anymore boogier than that. CIA has confirmed this.

      You ARE being annexed, just the same way other countries have been annexed by Putin.

      You really COULD wake up with a Viktor Yanokovych figure in power, who'll stuff his cabinet with pro Russia stooges.

      You really COULD l

  • what is this (Score:5, Insightful)

    by korgitser ( 1809018 ) on Sunday November 06, 2016 @09:29PM (#53225973)

    This just disgusting marketing propaganda. Poor the fool who signed up for this. And fsck the brain that conjured up this steaming pile of bulldroppings!

    • Or maybe they are playing like chess players, setting up something that looks like it's the champs computers, not TOO easy to break into, and filled with misleading tactics and analysis. Not even a pawn sacrifice.
      • Pawns are very valuable, as they can become queens once they reach the other end. The only things worth sacrificing are bishops, who can cover only 50% of the board
        • Sometime it's worth it to make a queen sacrifice to win. As a bonus, do that a few times and people will be very reluctant to attack an open queen. Chess is as much psychology as it is reasoning.
    • by msauve ( 701917 )
      How hard can it be? MS just has to give him a box running anything but Windows, and 99% of the job is done.
    • It is well known that chess players try to unsettle their opponents before important matches, and a world championship match is as big as it gets.

      However, capitalizing on the fact that the opponent is Russian, the match is played in New York, the fact that it starts immediately after the presidential elections, and that there was a lot of noise about Russia hacking US servers, is quite low.
      Well below what is expected from a reigning Chess World Champion.

      Disgusting stuff.

  • by melted ( 227442 ) on Sunday November 06, 2016 @09:31PM (#53225985) Homepage

    It's like asking Hannibal Lecter for cooking tips. Just use OSX or Linux. Problem solved.

    • It's like asking Hannibal Lecter for cooking tips.

      I'm not so sure: Hannibal Lecter at least seemed to know something about cooking.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Um, no. The professional level software is Windows only. Carlsen is locked in.

      • by melted ( 227442 )

        I'm sure if Carlsen asked, they would port whatever software he needed even to Commodore 64 for an endorsement.

    • You're right, but there is also some subtle psychology and gamesmanship going on here.

      Magnus Carlsen is much, much stronger than his opponent. He's the highest rated in history, and there is a huge gap between him and everybody else. And of the top 20 or so players right now, he's really the most able to play for a win from an equal position. Or for non-chess-players, that means he relies less on preparation than his opponent! Simply discovering his preparation would be less of an advantage than it would be

      • Magnus Carlsen is much, much stronger than his opponent. He's the highest rated in history, and there is a huge gap between him and everybody else.

        Highest rating achieved normalized to an equivalent (ELO) rating system:

        2893 - Fischer
        2882 - Kasparov
        2880 - Botvinnik
        2878 - Carlsen
        2870 - Capablanca

        So if by "highest rated in history" you mean 4th highest... sure.

        source, with a very nice historical graph animation system [youtube.com]

        He is significantly higher rated than his opponent, but his opponent isnt even in the current active top-5 rated at the moment (he is in 9th):

        2853 - Carlsen
        2823 - Caruana
        2811 - MVL
        2810 - Kramnik
        2795 - Aronian

        There is no

    • by Xest ( 935314 )

      That's the most braindead thing I've probably ever seen posted on an IT security article on Slashdot.

      The idea that changing OS can magically give you absolute security is an astoundingly dangerous myth to peddle.

      Please, step away from the keyboard before you cause someone some kind of data or financial loss.

    • It's like asking Hannibal Lecter for cooking tips. Just use OSX or Linux. Problem solved.

      This comment works very well but it's incomplete, doesn't take into account what end result is trying to be achieved, and may actually work against you.
      Let's go for taste

      It's like asking Hannibal Lecter for cooking tips. Just use McDonalds or KFC. The last two will get food into your mouth with limited effort or knowledge of cooking required. The former is likely delicious (working against you, lots of meat is delicious and I don't see humans being any different), but will actually require effort to cook.

      Se

  • Usually, AI is when computers imitate human intelligence.
    With chess now, it is the opposite : humans imitate computers.

    Even more striking is the way they do it : they pick a subset of the solution, hoping that they can make the best use of it, hence the secrecy. In most practical AIs (ex: self-driving cars), this is the opposite : the AI is only able to do a subset of the task, using a human for the edge cases.

    • Chess AI really isn't that advanced at all. Chess is not a solved game, so for beginning part (the first 15-25 moves) computers are actually very poor. They compensate by selecting moves from a database of human games pruned by humans for computer use. It's more like a scripted response than AI. However as the game simplifies and becomes more of a tactical question than a strategic one computers are in their own league. To prepare for the tournament the players will look over a database of chess games selec
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Unplug computer from the internet.
    If it needs internet access for CHESS of all things, you're doing it wrong.

    • by arth1 ( 260657 )

      If it needs internet access for CHESS of all things, you're doing it wrong.

      You don't know much about chess, I take it. Research is a huge part of chess, including looking up past games of your opponent, even if not noteworthy enough to make it into a book. And past games of people who have played against your opponent and lost or won, to determine patterns in where your opponents strengths and weaknesses are.
      These days, most of the research is best done through Internet.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        So just download a huge corpus, then review it offline. You do not have to keep downloading everything in small chunks, leaving a log of exactly what you have read.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          No. Most SMP machines with more than 128 core CPU can only be accessed through the internet.
          Already mentioned in TFA 'Mozart of chess' has spent months using high-powered chess computers to meticulously prepare moves

  • ...but enough to know not to bet on the white guy. I don't know much about security...but enough to know not to go to Microsoft.
    • by arth1 ( 260657 )

      In chess, on the other hand, the odds favor betting on the white guy.

    • In chess they used to say, don't bet against the Russian. Then Magnus Carlsen came along.

      In boxing... I recommend not betting against Wladimir Klitschko, or Vitali Klitschko for that matter. But you obviously heard differently.

  • That will probably work, because Russia has no interest into revealing hacking tools just to have someone win a Chess match.
  • by Trailer Trash ( 60756 ) on Sunday November 06, 2016 @10:13PM (#53226187) Homepage

    He's reached out to a number of companies for help in various areas besides Microsoft. He's asked Yahoo to help him put together a profitable long-term business strategy, along with Twitter in case the Yahoo deal falls through. He's also asking Exxon to help with a clean-energy plan. And he's reached out to the DNC for help securing his email server.

    With all his corporate partners he's set up for success!

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Microsoft Promises
    Microsoft Promises
    Microsoft Promises

    I'm crying tears of joy

  • It's easy to keep hackers out by not connecting that computer to a network.

    • by arth1 ( 260657 )

      It's easy to keep hackers out by not connecting that computer to a network.

      The hackers aren't after the machine, but what the human is doing. A spy camera or key logger works just fine even if the computer isn't on a network.

  • Why is this guy's computer networked if all he is doing is studying chess moves? Wouldn't the safest thing be to keep the program(s) on a laptop which is always in your possession or locked away?

    Why must, based solely on this person's claim of being hacked, this machine be networked?

    • I'm guessing that Sergey Karjaki might be looking to seek asylum in another country if he doesn't win this competition.

  • Linux is obviously a lot more secure - however, get someone competent to set up security.

    Using Microsoft, is essentially saying that you don't take security really seriously.

    • by Mal-2 ( 675116 )

      Microsoft can provide a perfectly secure platform for this guy's research cluster. Just keep it isolated from the world. I don't doubt that they can do this.

      Then again, so can pretty much any other large service provider.

  • So that there will be no Karjakin !
  • The match is just after the election, so chances are about 50/50 that the rules will be changed to Parcheesi just so the new president can fool himself into thinking he's the best ever at understanding chess.

  • Airgap the PCs used for chess. Don't communicate online about your strategies (OTOH, if you're the best chess player, you can talk about your success strategy and others still won't beat you. Skill is not about having an unique secret.)

"Protozoa are small, and bacteria are small, but viruses are smaller than the both put together."

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