Chess.com Bans 19-Year-Old Accused of Cheating, But No Evidence He Cheated Against Magnus Carlsen (theguardian.com) 84
"19-year-old chess grandmaster Hans Niemann was banned by massive online chess platform Chess.com," reports Motherboard, "just a few days after being accused of cheating in real life against five-time World Chess Champion Magnus Carlsen."
Chess.com said in a statement that "We have shared detailed evidence with him concerning our decision, including information that contradicts his statements regarding the amount and seriousness of his cheating on Chess.com." Niemann admitted to cheating on Chess.com in the past, but claimed that the two times he did were involving trivial, non-over-the-board games, and that he was only a child as he was 12 and 16 when it happened. "I just wanted to get higher-rated so I could play stronger players, so I cheated in random games on Chess.com," he said [in an online interview with St. Louis Chess Club].... " I have never cheated in an over-the-board game" [meaning a game that takes place on a real-world chess board]. Chess.com released its own statement Thursday countering his claims, which said: "At this time, we have reached out to Hans Niemann to explain our decision to privately remove him from Chess.com and our events. We have shared detailed evidence with him concerning our decision, including information that contradicts his statements regarding the amount and seriousness of his cheating on Chess.com...."
So far, there has not been any concrete evidence that points to Niemann cheating.... There are still many people who have been publicly supporting Niemann as the underdog. Russian chess grandmaster, Garry Kasparov, told TASS, "Of course we can't say with certainty that Niemann didn't cheat, but Carlsen surprisingly played the opening so badly with white that he automatically got into a worse position."
Chess.com's statement says they've "invited Hans to provide an explanation and response with the hope of finding a resolution where Hans can again participate on Chess.com."
The Guardian points out that Niemann has now also been uninvited from Chess.com's Global Championship, a $1m event with online qualifiers and an eight-player final in Toronto. But they also explore whether Neimann was really cheating... The Californian teenager, who does not have a coach but whose rating has jumped 250 points in three years, had already beaten the world champion a month earlier in an online tournament in Miami, when he made headlines for a one-sentence victory interview where he said: "Chess speaks for itself," before walking off.... [In his match this week against Carlsen] the position out of the opening was almost level, a minimal 0.3 plus for Black, but the world champion seemed to try too hard, with sub-optimal choices at moves 22, 40 and 42. Niemann also made inaccuracies, so the game lacked the tell-tale signs of computer aid....
It would appear that the central issue is whether Carlsen believes his pre-game analysis of his intended surprise 1 d4 Nf6 2 c4 e6 3 Nc3 Bb4 4 g3 was leaked, either by a mole within his camp or by a computer hack. An alternative explanation of the "leak" could be quite innocent. The relevant pawn structure, with plausible transpositions into Carlsen v Niemann, had already occurred in a previous well-known Carlsen game against England's Michael Adams in 2006. Niemann said he asked himself what ideas Carlsen might produce to divert him from his planned Catalan with ... Bb4+ and decided to check 5 Nc3, a rare transposition to the Nimzo-Indian. There was also Niemann's own very recent game against Le Quang Liem at Miami, where 5 g3 (instead of 5 e3 d5 as played) d5 6 a3 could easily transpose into Carlsen v Niemann....
[I]t is easy to understand why the world champion was so upset. Carlsen's tournament score will be cancelled, but his games will be rated and the defeat by Niemann will cost him seven rating points, a large setback in the context of trying to get from 2865 to 2900. His dream of a record rating has just become more distant.
Chess.com said in a statement that "We have shared detailed evidence with him concerning our decision, including information that contradicts his statements regarding the amount and seriousness of his cheating on Chess.com." Niemann admitted to cheating on Chess.com in the past, but claimed that the two times he did were involving trivial, non-over-the-board games, and that he was only a child as he was 12 and 16 when it happened. "I just wanted to get higher-rated so I could play stronger players, so I cheated in random games on Chess.com," he said [in an online interview with St. Louis Chess Club].... " I have never cheated in an over-the-board game" [meaning a game that takes place on a real-world chess board]. Chess.com released its own statement Thursday countering his claims, which said: "At this time, we have reached out to Hans Niemann to explain our decision to privately remove him from Chess.com and our events. We have shared detailed evidence with him concerning our decision, including information that contradicts his statements regarding the amount and seriousness of his cheating on Chess.com...."
So far, there has not been any concrete evidence that points to Niemann cheating.... There are still many people who have been publicly supporting Niemann as the underdog. Russian chess grandmaster, Garry Kasparov, told TASS, "Of course we can't say with certainty that Niemann didn't cheat, but Carlsen surprisingly played the opening so badly with white that he automatically got into a worse position."
Chess.com's statement says they've "invited Hans to provide an explanation and response with the hope of finding a resolution where Hans can again participate on Chess.com."
The Guardian points out that Niemann has now also been uninvited from Chess.com's Global Championship, a $1m event with online qualifiers and an eight-player final in Toronto. But they also explore whether Neimann was really cheating... The Californian teenager, who does not have a coach but whose rating has jumped 250 points in three years, had already beaten the world champion a month earlier in an online tournament in Miami, when he made headlines for a one-sentence victory interview where he said: "Chess speaks for itself," before walking off.... [In his match this week against Carlsen] the position out of the opening was almost level, a minimal 0.3 plus for Black, but the world champion seemed to try too hard, with sub-optimal choices at moves 22, 40 and 42. Niemann also made inaccuracies, so the game lacked the tell-tale signs of computer aid....
It would appear that the central issue is whether Carlsen believes his pre-game analysis of his intended surprise 1 d4 Nf6 2 c4 e6 3 Nc3 Bb4 4 g3 was leaked, either by a mole within his camp or by a computer hack. An alternative explanation of the "leak" could be quite innocent. The relevant pawn structure, with plausible transpositions into Carlsen v Niemann, had already occurred in a previous well-known Carlsen game against England's Michael Adams in 2006. Niemann said he asked himself what ideas Carlsen might produce to divert him from his planned Catalan with ... Bb4+ and decided to check 5 Nc3, a rare transposition to the Nimzo-Indian. There was also Niemann's own very recent game against Le Quang Liem at Miami, where 5 g3 (instead of 5 e3 d5 as played) d5 6 a3 could easily transpose into Carlsen v Niemann....
[I]t is easy to understand why the world champion was so upset. Carlsen's tournament score will be cancelled, but his games will be rated and the defeat by Niemann will cost him seven rating points, a large setback in the context of trying to get from 2865 to 2900. His dream of a record rating has just become more distant.
Unfortunate (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Unfortunate (Score:5, Insightful)
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Carlsen did say that he couldn't say anything about the reason he quit because otherwise he would get into trouble. Doing this right after losing that game, is a pretty obvious hint even though he didn't say it literally.
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Carlsen sprang one of his surprise openings and Neimann countered it easily and quickly. Carlsen was clearly upset by this, played badly and made a fatal mistake. Carlsen didn't make a public allegation, only a cryptic post that he knew something he couldn't talk about. Chess.org confronted Neimann with a dossier of suspicious online play (he was been suspended for this twice before) and suspended him. Carlsen walked out of the tournament. Neimann was subject to anti-cheating search and scans before his
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It was the president of FIDE who made that comment (if I say something I'm in big trouble)
Carlsen hasn't said anything.
Re: Unfortunate (Score:1)
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By extrapolating his rating graph, he'll be 2900+ and world champion soon anyway, and all will be well.
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How did he cheat? (Score:1)
I looked above and at the Vice article and do not understand how he cheated. Did he analyze previous games of his opponents? That sounds completely fair. I would do that if I was a boxer or MMA fighter. Where exactly is a description of his process for cheating? I want to try it against a friend who is a great chess player :)
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did he use some site to tell him the best play to make?
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I asked we don't see how you could cheat in any meaningful fashion at that level. It would be like trying to have the AI from Street fighter win Evo. It would just get stomped by any player skilled enough to make it into the top eight.
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I can't see how that would work at that level of play. When you're playing at the top like those guys you need a bloody supercomputer to compete.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't these days a decent PC sufficient?
Or even a phone?
Re:How did he cheat? (Score:5, Interesting)
When you're playing at the top like those guys you need a bloody supercomputer to compete.
Not true at all. Stockfish running on a Raspberry Pi could easily beat any grandmaster.
The days when the best chess players could beat a computer are decades in the past.
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Stockfish on stock hardware will easily dispatch a grandmaster.
Re:How did he cheat? (Score:5, Interesting)
I can't see how that would work at that level of play. When you're playing at the top like those guys you need a bloody supercomputer to compete.
We have those in our pocket now...
Magnus Carlsen has a rating of around 2860. Stockfish can reach into the 3500s within a few seconds of analysis now on a modern CPU.
http://www.computerchess.org.u... [computerchess.org.uk]
there's a table of a recent contest on a quad CPU machine. The difference in rating between Magnus Carlsen and Stockfish is a bit more, but not much more than between me (at my peak as a Minor player - the weakest category in a chess tournament) and Magnus Carlsen.
A vaguely modern high end phone running stockfish will get ELO ratings well into the 3000s.
Re: How did he cheat? (Score:1)
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Where exactly is a description of his process for cheating? I want to try it against a friend who is a great chess player :)
You have to insert a huge dildo up your ass
Occam's razor says it need not be huge. In fact, a small pencil could be RF controlled to inscribe the next few moves onto the rectal wall. Once the wall was full of moves, the player only need pass a stool (into a diaper) and they're set to go again.
Re: How did he cheat? (Score:2)
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Everyone who has analyzed the situation has concluded that he didn't cheat in the tournament.
He did cheat when playing online, including in at least one tournament.. He did so by using a computer chess engine.
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We don't know for sure, but as the article states they suspect that his prep was leaked. Meaning that Neimann knew ahead of time what Carlson strategy would be. With that said the game still had to be played, the fact that Carlson couldn't recognize that his prep was compromised and that his plan wasn't working still should have been possible.
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So Carlsen's team floating the idea that his plan had somehow been leaked to Niemann just reeks of an excuse for him losing. Even your own comment about Carlsen not realizing that his opening gambit wasn't working seems to further prove that he simply seemed to be playing from a base of arrogance and it cost him.
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There was some earlier story about buttons in shoes wired to a Raspberry PI hidden in your underpants as a chess cheating device. Here's a link to such a device... https://boingboing.net/2022/09... [boingboing.net]
Re: How did he cheat? (Score:1)
Interesting Chess.com Move (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Interesting Chess.com Move (Score:4, Insightful)
The answer is obvious. Magnus got his tiny little feelings hurt when the kid countered his opening like it was basic theory. Chess.com needs his celebrity, so the kid had to go.
Re:Interesting Chess.com Move (Score:5, Insightful)
Right now that is exactly what it looks like. If more evidence is released, it could change the appearance, though.
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You cannot prove a negative. A history of lying and cheating is enough. He never would of been allowed into the match if his history of cheating was known beforehand.
And remember. This is this guys multi millionaire career. If Chess.com cannot prove their allegations in a court of law, they just opened themselves up to large multi million dollar defamation settlements.
Re:Interesting Chess.com Move (Score:4, Insightful)
It was completely known. He was banned for it at the time. This is not new revelations of new cheating. This is additional punishment for cheating that he was already punished for.
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Presumably because he just admitted in an interview (5 days ago) to having cheated on chess.com, obliging the website to launch an immediate review of his past games.
Re:Interesting Chess.com Move (Score:5, Informative)
He admitted to cheating on chess.com. He got banned from chess.com. This whole comment section is mind boggling, where it's like no one even read the summary. It has nothing to do with the recent in-person chess match
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Chess.com cheating (Score:2)
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stupid analogy - someone has to loose, even if both players are cheating.
Re: Chess.com cheating (Score:2)
Aren't a lot of games a stalemate/draw?
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Time for Faraday shielding and spectrum analyzers (Score:5, Interesting)
With a bit of power and redundancy getting a low bandwidth signal into a Faraday cage is possible, but getting a high bandwidth RF signal out will be very hard. Conceivably ultranarrowband could still get something like morsecode out, but it shouldn't be too hard to pick that up with modern surveillance equipment. Any computing device capable of decent chess should show up with a simple metal detector, even inserted.
So no need to have them be naked, just put them in a Faraday cage.
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getting a high bandwidth RF signal out will be very hard.
You only need to transmit about 10 bits of data per move.
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You don't normally need to give a second coordinate. It is enough to say "Q-f4", for example. There are 6 different pieces. So you could do it with 9 bits.
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You don't normally need to give a second coordinate. It is enough to say "Q-f4", for example. There are 6 different pieces. So you could do it with 9 bits.
OTOH a move sometimes needs disambiguation:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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Yeah, I was thinking about that. I think it's rare enough that a move needs a disambiguator AND that a good player couldn't tell which of the moves is correct, that it wouldn't be necessary.
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Phantomfive points out that it's 9 bits if you have something similar to normal chess notation.
I'll point out that if you specify a piece with 3 bits and a direction with 3 bits, that will be more than enough for a chess grandmaster to work with. For pawns you could specify the 3 bit for pawn and then the next 3 bits could specify which pawn- and for everything else but knights and queens, you could probably do with 5 bits total, not 6, as most pieces don't have many legal and useful moves at a time.
So 5-6
Re:Time for Faraday shielding and spectrum analyze (Score:4, Interesting)
Simpler than that: Enumerate the legal moves in the position according to a consistent, agreed-upon algorithm, and transmit the number of the move. Most positions will have no more than 64 legal moves, many positions will have no more than 32. So 5-6 bits is indeed enough.
The only flaw is that you can't transmit an illegal move. Positions exist where the best move is to castle and hope that the opponent has forgotten that you've already moved your king and castling is illegal...
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This is a fun game. There's finding a minimal encoding, and finding the smallest encoding a human could use. I'm guessing that your 10-bit encoding is 4 bits to select the piece and 6 bits for the square?
The simplest and most obvious encoding requires 12 bits, using three bits each for the rank and file of the start and end positions. I'm starting from the assumption that this is reasonable and any new scheme shouldn't be much more complicated than this, which requires just simple counting.
9 bits was the
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I think it's "less than 12, and probably less than 11". :-)
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Hilariously, or not, the only chess player involved who has suggested this a a solution is... Hans Niemann.
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They have spectrum analyzers at the tournament. They also have hired magicians to watch for any slight of hand. They also are required to go through metal detectors.
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The general environment is a bit noisy, a signal which has to escape from inside the cage will be easier to detect.
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Well, you can send light signals out of the cage without any problem. Things like hand signals, etc.
And what you are really trying to stop is signals being sent to the player, not signals sent out.
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a Faraday cage
That may have worked in the 20th century. But in 2022 a computer that plays chess (better than a human) could easily be so small, it'd literally fit into your shoe, ear or tooth without anyone able to discover short of x-ray equipment.
Re:Time for Faraday shielding and spectrum analyze (Score:5, Interesting)
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Live audience is right out, also toilets need to be inside the cage.
unpossible (Score:2)
If he cheated to get ahead (Score:2)
then he may have discouraged a real talent. Cheaters don't just taint the public image of every competitor, they also tip the scales long after the individual act of cheating. Cheaters must be disqualified, in sport, in games, in business, in politics and their ill-gotten gains must be taken from them. No more "yes, i used doping, here's my book, make me rich".
When an opponent things you've cheated (Score:2)
Quite often its a euphamism for "I lost against someone I didn't expect to lose to". And its especially galling if its a kid.
Not saying he didn't cheat, but you often see this sort of sour grapes in competition.
Release an NFT of the game ! (Score:1)
Because it would definitely make them millions.
And because that's how every story reported on Slashdot seems to end these days.
If you come at the king you best not miss (Score:2)
Omar Little
banned for winning (Score:2)
It's like a casino. If you win "too much," that's considered evidence of cheating, they can ban you. Nevermind the whole premise of a casino is that people go there believing they can beat the odds.
Um (Score:5, Interesting)
Niemann admitted to cheating on Chess.com in the past, but claimed that the two times he did were involving trivial, non-over-the-board games, and that he was only a child as he was 12 and 16 when it happened. "I just wanted to get higher-rated so I could play stronger players, so I cheated in random games on Chess.com," he said [in an online interview with St. Louis Chess Club].... " I have never cheated in an over-the-board game" [meaning a game that takes place on a real-world chess board].
Well, you kind of torched your credibility when you did that, hmm?
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However, you can get a game with somebody 300 points higher than you. If tho
So what happens is (Score:5, Interesting)