Magnus Carlsen Resigns After One Move In Chess Rematch With Hans Niemann (chessdom.com) 87
In a rematch today against 19-year-old Hans Niemann, World Chess Champion Magnus Carlsen resigned his game in the second move and quickly went offline. Susan Polgar commented on Carlsen's resignation against Niemann saying it's: "Definitely a protest move!", while GM Jon Ludvig Hammer said Carlsen should be sanctioned during the live Norwegian TV program.
The chess world has been in chaos ever since Carlsen dropped out from a prestigious tournament following a stunning loss, which ignited suspicions of foul play.
Chessdom has included a "timetable of happenings" related to Niemann in their report.
The chess world has been in chaos ever since Carlsen dropped out from a prestigious tournament following a stunning loss, which ignited suspicions of foul play.
Chessdom has included a "timetable of happenings" related to Niemann in their report.
Scared Stiff (Score:5, Interesting)
He can't play because if he loses he looks stupid.
However, this violates the sportsmanship rules, and ironically throwing a game is a form of cheating! Even other Norwegian players are calling for him to be sanctioned.
Re:Scared Stiff (Score:4, Funny)
He can't play because if he loses he looks stupid.
Yes, you're right. He looks soooo much more intelligent with this move instead.
A true professional competitor.
/sarcasm
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There are a few subtle things that aren't exactly cheating but are considered bad sportsmanship. Chess is one of those games that has had a long history of unwritten rules and general decorum that can still lead to sanctions if broken even if they aren't literally written down somewhere. Leaving tournaments you can't win the way you wanted to and throwing matches as a form of protest against... something are among them.
Also for example, while it's difficult to do in an online game for obvious reasons, playe
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This comment has literally nothing to do with the issue at hand.
So to answer the question directly: Niemann is being accused of somehow having moves illegally transmitted to him, but nobody knows how or why. However, he is a confessed cheat and has been previously kicked of chess.com.
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Niemann is being accused of
So far Niemann hasn't been accused of anything, at least not publicly. Magnus has insinuated that there's something about Niemann that he can't talk about, but that's it.
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And I should've confirmed what you said about past cheating admissions, since I guess in those past cases (though not the current one) there was obviously an accusation of cheating.
is this /.?
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unwritten rules and general decorum that can still lead to sanctions if broken even if they aren't literally written down somewhere. Leaving tournaments you can't win the way you wanted to and throwing matches as a form of protest against... something are among them.
False. It is written in FIDE rules that withdrawing from a tournament without a reason is a sportsmanship violation.
And throwing a game is, too.
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Ultimately it ended up being ruled that the promoted piece was indeed a rook
How does that happen? It sounds like an abortion of fair play to me.
Re:What are the actual allegations? (Score:4, Interesting)
You move a piece on the board. Everyone can see what you did.
You have to be the one who decides which piece to move, and where to move it to. You can't have someone else help you decide. You can't have a computer help you decide (and computers are so much better at chess than humans these days).
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Hans Niemann is being accused of cheating. First off, I don't see how this is even possible.
Simple: You have a hidden chess computer telling you what pieces to move.
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Hans Niemann is being accused of cheating. First off, I don't see how this is even possible.
Simple: You have a hidden chess computer telling you what pieces to move.
The most damning evidence I've seen is he played a lot better when the game was broadcast live [twitter.com]. Which implies he had an accomplice with a chess program watching and sending him info.
Of course, that chart is 2019-2020 (does the trend hold till now?) and one shouldn't put too much weight on the accuracy or thoroughness of pseudo-anonymous twitter accounts.
Re:What are the actual allegations? (Score:5, Insightful)
Simple: You have a hidden chess computer telling you what pieces to move.
You don't even need that. Just a single bit of information is enough.
You could have someone in the audience running Stockfish on their cellphone. If they scratch their nose, it means, "There is a critical move. Take your time and look for it."
Victory at the grandmaster level often comes down to time management, so there is a significant advantage in knowing when to think carefully and when to conserve clock time by just making the obvious move.
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Anal bead. Three short buzzes, then two long buzzes. Checkmate.
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> Hans Niemann is being accused of cheating. First off, I don't see how this is even possible.
Someone in Magnus' inner training circle leaked his strategies in advance. It would be the same as a spy stealing an NFL playbook. It's an unfair advantage.
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Hans Niemann is being accused of cheating.
This is actually false. There has been no actual accusation. There is just social media speculation that that is what Carlsen thinks is happening, combined with Carlsen not clarifying, which makes it clear he assents to these views.
If there was an actual accusation, it could be evaluated. There is either evidence that supports the accusation, or there isn't. By not making an accusation, though, there is no way for Hans to clear his name. There is no investigation that might reject the accusations.
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Learn to fucking check before speaking out of your ass.
https://hard-drive.net/chess-g... [hard-drive.net]
https://www.sportstiger.com/ne... [sportstiger.com]
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From hard-drive.net:
> Hard Drive is a very real video games news site that you should not question. Just absorb the information as truth and move on.
Form sportstiger.com:
404
Very reliable sources.
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You have so little comprehension of what is going on and what I said and what all the words mean that those links actually support what I said.
I'm a 2000+ rated player, this is my wheelhouse. And you're a moron. You're usually a moron, though, so it is no surprise. You're confidently wrong about everything.
Re: What are the actual allegations? (Score:1)
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They claim that using lots of unconventional strategies is a sign of a computer playing, because humans tend to stick to things they know and have seen before.
That seems pretty weak to me. Right now one of the rising stars in Sumo is a guy called Ura, who uses a variety of unusual techniques. A couple of days ago he won with a move that was last used 20 years ago in the top division. Sometimes people come along with an unusual but effective game.
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You're expected to use only your own wits to decide your moves. One form of cheating in chess is to communicate with other people or computers to choose what move to make.
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True.
Though I have to admit my first thought actually something like a fair play gesture, to give a point back to your opponent if you think that he lost it due to bad luck (i.e. being falsely accused of cheating)
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It will be interesting to see how this pans out. I do not care much about chess, but this has implication for any mental task where automation code running on computers competes with human minds and in addition, humans compete against each other. In the case at hand, if he cheated, Niemann will eventually be found out because if that case he has to continue cheating to not suddenly be massive worse at the game, at least against Carlsen. If he did not cheat, the accusation of cheating is an obvious one of a
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Re: Scared Stiff (Score:1)
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They could resolve this easily: Get both players in the same room after being thoroughly scanned (MRI, X-ray, sonogram, etc) and then have them play multiple games. The results will speak for themselves. Carlsen can then be legitimately sanctioned for throwing or the other guy can be banned from professional chess forever.
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Carlsen already threw the game, though. None of that is needed.
Carlsen wouldn't agree to that match, Niemann has already offered to play under those conditions.
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None of that proves whether or not Niemann somehow cheated in his first game with Carlson. Just because Niemann beat him once, doesn't mean he'd be able to do so again.
It was reported that the game in question wasn't especially exceptional and that Carlson himself didn't play his best. And that game was played OTB (in person).
What's added smoke to the fire are revelations about Niemann's past, and the anomaly that he plays markedly better in games that a streamed live. But non of that in itself can be used
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All they need now (Score:3)
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Now? Chess has always been a soap opera. Staunton, Morphy, Alekhine, Fischer...
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What if we got Calculon?
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Fischer
to quote mike tyson, "bobby fischer? that guy's crazy"
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Now? Chess has always been a soap opera. Staunton, Morphy, Alekhine, Fischer...
Add to the ellipsis, Viktor Korchnoi [wikipedia.org], the defector vs. the pride of the Soviet state, and you get all the drama of the Cold War, ready for some over-the-top Netflix treatment.
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Maybe they could make a musical?
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The world could be their oyster!
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Learn some fucking history before posting: Chess has always been a soap opera.
Whiny Little Bitch (Score:5, Funny)
His favourite piece is the Drama Queen.
Again... (Score:4, Insightful)
Ok, we're at it again. Even though it's been a few weeks since the drama began, we still don't know much. But remember, one thing that we do know for certain is that Hans Niemann has cheated before. I think that this is worth keeping in mind as we lambast Carlsen.
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Ok, we're at it again. Even though it's been a few weeks since the drama began, we still don't know much. But remember, one thing that we do know for certain is that Hans Niemann has cheated before. I think that this is worth keeping in mind as we lambast Carlsen.
Well, of course... Carlsen is *so* good, he can detect Niemann cheating at the just second move of the game! :-)
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So what is the theory here, that Niemann found a chess master greater than Carlsen (where?) to feed him a winning move remotely?
No, it's that someone was feeding the game into a chess computer and then somehow signaling the results to the player.
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All of them, computers have been able to beat all human chess players at the highest levels for some time now. The first was Deep Blue [wikipedia.org] which beat Garry Kasparov in 1997. Since then both software and hardware have improved leaps and bounds and every chess player has the ability, theoretically, to carry a device far more capable than Deep Blue in their pocket.
Chess is also a very easy to game to encode [wikipedia.org]. Players think and communicate in terms of notation and so signalling moves whether human to human or human
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Well, unfortunately there are complications with this idea.
First, Carlsen hasn't actually directly accused Niemann of cheating against any particular person during in any particular game. In order to run that experiment we would a specific game that Niemann has been accused of cheating during.
Secondly is the fact that a chess engine doesn't have to be used to play the entire game. You can use it to give you the best move on any given turn. This means that cheating doesn't have to mean that you had the human
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Pretty much what the other poster replying to you said. There have probably been a dozen or more articles on Slashdot over the years about computers over taking humans at chess. Now that it's old news I suppose it doesnt come up much anymore though.
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So what is the theory here, that Niemann found a chess master greater than Carlsen (where?) to feed him a winning move remotely?
It's almost as if you've never heard of computers.
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He's just a Slashdotter of a certain age. He remembers that a computer that could beat the best chess players is an AI problem, but he's heard on good authority here that AI doesn't exist, so clearly a computer that can beat the best chess players doesn't exist.
Wait until he hears what happened to Go.
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He's just a Slashdotter.
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Lol, yes. Deep Blue was rated about 2700. You can just go download a modern open source chess engine with a rating of 3500+ and run it on your PC. Or phone.
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There are a bunch of similar chess playing programs, but the cheating probably isn't that blatant. It's tough to recognize something like "Be5" transmitted through a set of anal beads. As others have noted in these comments, in high level chess a signal that means "be careful on this move" would give a decent player a pretty big advantage.
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Chess was too boring so they introduced time clocks. Each player gets the same total amount of time to play so you want to make most moves very quickly to save clock time for the ones that need more thought.
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Magnus is very busy at the moment... (Score:2)
...pitching a continuation of his TV series Robin
Rumour has it that even Radiohead will do some of the music, and a cameo in the show too
PS: joke alert
Mental problems (Score:2)
Color me not surprised - a world class chess player with mental/emotional issues?
That's not surprising at all.
It's been a while since a site was slashdotted.... (Score:2)
But it seems the chessdom site is having some serious capacity issues.
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It's been a long time since we've seen a site get slashdotted.
Stories like this are great... (Score:1)
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Fischer understood very well that publicity brings prize money. He went out of his way to cause drama because every newpaper article was an increase in the potential of prize pools. Before Bobby, nobody got rich playing chess. Nobody at all.
Carlsen got some bad vibes about the game? (Score:2)
if you know what I mean 8^D
Some people take the game way too seriously (Score:2)
I played against the badass chess player who was rated around 2000 and beat him ... dude got a literal nosebleed over losing to an unrated player. Of course that win in-turn made me think I too was a badass -- maybe some kind of prodigy .. so I went on internet chess server (this was in the 1990s btw, well before chess.com) and lost every game I played. Conclusion .. chess sucks.
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I can regularly and reliably win against the chess.com 1400 computer model.
I will lose very time against a human 1400. On lichess, where I played humans more I'm around 1000.
Computer models and snowflake 2000s will lead you astray.
That ego needs a bit of pruning (Score:4)
I agree. Kick him out 'til he learned to act like a grownup.
just bizarre (Score:3)
Honestly I'm starting to suspect that the best explanation is that Magnus Carlsen is looking to retire (or maybe just a payday) and this is all some kind of kayfabe stunt to draw in a big burst of publicity for a last sip at the $$$, or the start of some pageantry where he hands over his position. And yes, this is after reading/watching the commentary and meta-commentary.
If you really believe that world chess grandmasters are dumber than the WWE, go right ahead, but at the end of the day publicity+advertising pays the bill for any sport and, imho, the chess people have figured that out...
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Honestly I'm starting to suspect that the best explanation is that Magnus Carlsen is looking to retire (or maybe just a payday) and this is all some kind of kayfabe stunt to draw in a big burst of publicity for a last sip at the $$$, or the start of some pageantry where he hands over his position. And yes, this is after reading/watching the commentary and meta-commentary.
If you really believe that world chess grandmasters are dumber than the WWE, go right ahead, but at the end of the day publicity+advertising pays the bill for any sport and, imho, the chess people have figured that out...
The other explanation is that Niemann has a history of cheating in online chess, probably more than he has admitted to [twitter.com] and there's some very suspicious patterns in his tournament play [twitter.com].
In general, when you have an activity where cheating is high reward and hard to detect you need really strong penalties to deter cheating else it becomes endemic. That's why lawyers are actually fairly incorruptible (since the costs of destroying their reputation can be career ending) while rich folks cheat like crazy on their
I am currently with Carlson (Score:2)
I am currently with Carlson, being a cycling fan that suffered through years of lying and cheating which is extremely difficult to prove. While I don't think Niemann cheated across the table, the thought of it has completely distracted Carlson who is unable to play to the best of his ability as a result.
You have to understand that to Carlson chess is everything and the thought of someone gaining advantage through cheating is completely abhorrent to him I don't think he will be able to reconcile with anyone
Real men play Kung Fu Chess. (Score:3)