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Games Entertainment

Chess Dispute: Kasparov vs. the World vs. MSN 178

Richard Bean wrote this piece about a chess match on MSN's Gaming Zone between ultragrandmaster Gary Kasparov and the entire rest of the world, with "the world's" moves being decided by online vote. But something went wrong after move #50, by move #58 MSN changed the rules so that only Windows users could vote on moves, and murmured complaints from disgruntled participants and observers about unfair move-selections and ballot-box stuffing (which MSN had originally claimed was impossible) rose to an online roar. Click below to read the full story.

The following is by Richard Bean, Queensland, Australia.

Starting June 19, 1999, an experiment in playing chess over the Internet was held at the Microsoft Network's Gaming Zone. The world's highest rated player, de jure world champion Gary Kasparov, was to play a game versus "The World" at a rate of one move every 24 hours. After Kasparov decided on his move, he would send it to four expert teenage analysts who would suggest moves for "The World" with analysis. Internet users were to vote for whichever move they preferred, with the move receiving the highest number of votes being played. Voting was by use of Microsoft Zone software or, later, simply authenticated by entering a valid email address.

In the course of the game, it became obvious that the effort being put in by one analyst, US Women's Champion Irina Krush, far exceeded that being put in by the other 3 analysts (French Grandmaster Etienne Bacrot, US International Master Florin Felecan, and the German Elisabeth Paehtz). The quality of her work and the number of lines analyzed by her dwarfed anything the other analysts provided. She was aided by several grandmasters, the St Petersburg Grandmaster Chess School, and most of all by the World Team Strategy Bulletin Board. She became the unofficial team leader, and of the first 57 moves, her recommendation was played 53 times by "The World" (the exceptions were moves 3, 6, 51 and 52).

At move 51, the play had been virtually forced since move 40, and the World Team Strategy BBS had determined that the best move was 51... Kb1-a1; this move was recommended by Irina and endorsed by the GM Chess School. However, 51... b7-b5, the recommendation of Elisabeth Paehtz, was played. A BBS member, Jose Unodos, claimed to have "stuffed the vote" simply by entering multiple different email addresses and voting repeatedly for the same move. To test whether this worked, another BBS member, Martin Sims, stuffed the vote about 250 times on move 53 for a move that no-one else would play - 53... Qd1-e2, giving the Black Queen away for nothing with check, which would never be played by a sane player. This move made it into the top five votes (search for d1-e2), proving that vote-stuffing was possible by another method - creating multiple Zone IDs while still using the same IP address. Previous Microsoft denials that vote-stuffing was possible became a change in policy - non-Windows users could not vote, as at the beginning of the game.

On move 58, due to a problem with delayed e-mail, Irina Krush did not receive Kasparov's move until after 1am EST, when she had gone to bed. Due to school tests the next day she could not post her analysis until later. Microsoft was warned that her move recommendation would be delayed. It had been determined beyond doubt on the Strategy BBS that 58...Qf3-e4 lost and 58...Qf3-f5 was forced to retain drawing chances. (The endgame was too complicated to say for certain what the correct result should be - 6-piece endgame tablebases would determine it for certain but would require vast amounts of computer time & memory to generate.) Paehtz & Bacrot, who did not follow the BBS, recommended Qf3-e4, Felecan recommended Qf3-f5, and Krush's move recommendation was never posted. (Krush's recommendations were almost unanimously followed up to this point, even in the case of the other 3 analysts recommending one move and Krush recommending another. Hence, had her analysis been posted, Qf3-f5 would have been played, as it would have been a 2-2 split with Irina explicitly stating that Qf3-e4 was a losing move.)

E-mail posted by Smartchess, Irina's corporate sponsor, demonstrated that her recommendation had been sent at 12:20pm PST. The submission was repeated at 5:10pm PST. The voting page at the Zone claimed throughout the voting period that "Irina's move recommendation will appear here shortly." Irina continued to post to the Microsoft BBS, demonstrating that any network problem was not at Smartchess's end. After voting began, Microsoft corrected a mis-spelling of Kasparov's name on the Zone webpage without updating Irina's analysis.

On previous moves, a similar message had appeared for other analysts' delayed recommendations, with the analysis being posted later. On move 58, with Irina's analysis not posted, the moderator, Grandmaster Daniel King, calling 58...Qf3-e4 a "sensible option", and the analysts 2-1 in favour of the losing move Qf3-e4, it won the vote and was played.

Outrage ensued on the BBS, and in the live chat with Danny King, Microsoft representatives attempted to smooth over the furore. Acknowledging that Krush's move recommendation was sent at 12:20pm PST, Microsoft spokesman Eddie Ranchigoda, Marketing Manager for the MSN Gaming Zone, stated that it was "not received by MS e-mail till after 4:00 PT [after which] we generally do not have resources to update the site unless an emergency occurs." (Apparently, even though voting was a 24-hour international affair, no-one at Microsoft realised the importance of Irina's contribution or worked after 4pm.) Another spokesman, "Ben", implicity acknowledged that vote-stuffing was possible, stating that Microsoft "generally [relied] on the honor of the World Team members to keep the game on track" (without explaining how Kasparov could have been prevented from stuffing the vote with a second-best move himself).

As a protest against what was seen as Microsoft incompetence and/or malevolence, and in an attempt to leave a lasting memorial of move 58 events, BBS members rallied together to vote for 59... Qe1, another move which gave the queen away for free with check. This won the vote with 66.27% of the votes. Despite this being a legal move with many members having voted for it exactly once, Microsoft "disqualified" the move by deleting all votes for it, due to alleged vote-stuffing, without explaining how it had been detected at that point and not before. The final tally of the modified vote-count added to 100.07%.

The event showed that World Team discussion on the BBS, led by Irina Krush, and assisted by computers could provide a series of moves equal in quality to Kasparov's. However, due to the fact that an e-mail was delayed on Microsoft servers, and despite an advance warning that an analyst's move recommendation would be delayed, a losing move was played at move 58 due to Microsoft's failure to post Krush's analysis. On the next move, BBS users were deprived of their opportunity to protest the handling of move 58 due to the disqualification of votes for a perfectly legal move. International Master Ken Regan, an associate professor of Computer Science at Buffalo, among others, called for a Microsoft explanation of this failure in electronic democracy, which had not been delivered as of this writing.

A newbot shows no major newspapers have yet covered the story; however, other accounts can be found at a Norwegian net newspaper and a German chess newsletter.

(Note: The MSNBC BBS articles have a 48-hour expiry time and hence copies have been provided rather than the original links. The expiry time, as well as the 55-character column width making URLs difficult to include in text, was introduced as the game dragged on longer than expected.)

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Chess Dispute: Kasparov vs. the World vs. MSN

Comments Filter:
  • by rde ( 17364 ) on Monday October 18, 1999 @03:19AM (#1605426)
    There was definitely cheating going on. I saw the world kicking Kasparov under the table.
  • by MartyJG ( 41978 ) on Monday October 18, 1999 @03:26AM (#1605427) Homepage
    Only Windows users can vote for moves? Isn't this giving an unfair advantage to Kasparov? ;-)
  • by anthonyclark ( 17109 ) on Monday October 18, 1999 @03:27AM (#1605428)
    Hmmm,

    I'd be very careful of accusing anyone of cheating. I think that this is a simple cock-up, probably bought about by a simple "Not My Problem" attitude somewhere along the chain...

    Would this have been posted had been any other company than Microsoft running the show? I wonder...
  • This is definitely unfair on the part of Microsoft. At one point World held a won position (around move 50, I guess) but after that the moves were so lousy that anybody could have beaten them.
    M$ turns every chance into an opportunity to sell windows. Lousy idea leaving a very sour taste in the mouth.
  • This from the company that makes NT?

    It looks like they didn't even require a unique IP address! Cheatproof, eh?

    Yet another attempt to enhance the Microsoft reputation gone horribly, horribly awry when the true quaility of their products and thought processes comes through.

    I wonder if there's a grandmaster out there who would agree to a chess tourney set up by a open-source community? I'm no chess freak, but something similar in concept to the Microsoft idea, but with a superior backend (think IP uniquing, online expert recommendations, online what-if scenarios).

    Does anyone have the bandwidth and the know-how to succeed where Microsoft has failed?
  • by Forrest J. Cavalier ( 16105 ) on Monday October 18, 1999 @03:36AM (#1605431)
    It looked like a pretty interesting endgame when I last looked.

    It's a shame that in order to get MSN to admit to problems, an interesting experiment had to be ruined by forcing selection of second-best and irrational moves

    Neither Kasparov nor the World can claim true victory. And MSN isn't a winner either. Rematch? I'm sure the world wants it.

    Forrest J. Cavalier III, Mib Software Voice 570-992-8824
    The Reuse RocKeT [mibsoftware.com]: Efficient awareness for software reuse
    Free WWW site lists over 6000 of the most popular open source libraries, functions, and applications.

  • by Black Parrot ( 19622 ) on Monday October 18, 1999 @03:37AM (#1605432)
    ...and here's MS's first PR disaster of the week.

    Boilerplate denials and coverage in the technical press will follow later in the day. The mainstream press will pick it up later in the week.

    Business as usual.

    --
    It's October 6th. Where's W2K? Over the horizon again, eh?
  • > It looks like they didn't even require a unique IP address! Cheatproof, eh?

    Only problem I can see if people on dial-up links with dynamically assigned IP addresses. On other other hand, how hard would've been to store the time along with the IP and not allow votes from that IP for a given period of time (say 5 -> 10 minutes?) ...
  • by Anonymous Coward
    it's not just my copy of the Exchange IMS MTA that quietly hides email for a few hours.
  • by bier ( 12706 ) on Monday October 18, 1999 @03:42AM (#1605435)
    I do not want to sound conspiratorial (if thats possible), or off-topic, but didn't Bill Gates claim in his BBC interview that MS, and more specifically himself could not change or alter content. He claimed that MS just provides the tools, it does not tell people how/when to use them. But it seems to me MS dictated exactly as they saw fit, and even excluded certain types of users (non-Windows) from participating in this World chess match, either through neglect or by choice. In a world that becomes more and more dominated by a single company (MSN, Windows, Web-TV, hotmail, etc.) I have become concerned how the content and delivery of information are controlled in the future.
  • "Would this have been posted had been any other company than Microsoft running the show?"

    Oh, Arse.

    I meant to say (drum roll please)

    "Would this have been posted had any other company than Microsoft been running the show?" Which when I think about probably sucks grammatically, but I've been writing Perl code all day, and context switching is a bitch sometimes...

    fscking Monday afternoons :-(
  • by nharmon ( 97591 ) on Monday October 18, 1999 @03:49AM (#1605437)
    I'd like to see slashdot set up a gaming interface, perhaps Kasparov Vs. Slashdot (and we won't stuff votes!). Now, if we can't get Kasparov, let's start a Slashdot Vs. Slashdot game. One white team, one black team. Each turn wll be majority vote. Since slashdot accounts are limited to email addresses, vote stuffing would significantly be reduced.
  • True, and Dynamic IPs do allow a certian amount of ballot stuffing (e.g. Keep calling back till you get a new IP, vote, lather-rinse-repeat), but that's usually limited to a class-C or a couple of class-Cs for your ISP.

    Overall, I think the loss due to complete IP uniquing would be less than the loss due to not having it in place.

    BTW: I like your solution more. That's nice, I may have to use that for some things I'm working on.
  • It looks like they didn't even require a unique IP address!

    AFAIK, requiring a unique IP will hinder progress more than it will prevent cheating. For instance, those who use a dial-in ISP will have a different IP every time they dial in and could vote multiple times easily. It could also prevent other (ligitimate) voters from voting until they log off and log back in.

    There are several other other places that would cause problems too. In general, it's probably not a good idea to require unique IPs. There are probably better ways to prevent/minimize cheating... via cookies or something similar?

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday October 18, 1999 @04:00AM (#1605442)
    Why do these things always assume that people only have 1 e-mail address? Funmail [funmail.co.uk] is an excellent mail service that allows you to have upto 20 e-mail addresses at any one time, and change them as often as you like (with 3,500 possible names after the @, and infinite possibilities before the @)! How can you combat that?!

    As for vote stuffing, reminds me of the time that Steps didn't win at some Brit music award thingy, of course they were miffed, the night before they had been ahead in the poll. But suddenly, a large number of votes came in for the hitherto-unrenowned Belle and Sebastian (Edinburgh popgroup). Apparently 12% of the votes had been from Cambridge and Edinburgh Universities in the last day. This is an example where all the e-mails were genuine, all the people voting were different, yet the poll was rigged. (Spam works).

    In another example, the BBC Sports Personality of the Year (a while back) noticed a huge number of votes coming in for a very unlikely candidate, Justin Fashanu, and disqualified him from the competition. But this was only because he stuck out like a sore thumb. If it had been a more likely candidate, chances are they might have got through this net.

    Got to come up with some other way of validating e-mail polls. Phone polls used to work quite well because people only have a few phone numbers and each call would run up a nice little bill, enough discouragement, and a lot of effort just for little impact. But here, with dynamic IP addresses, millions of potential e-mail addresses per person, and at little cost to the end user, how do you guard against it?!

  • by mcc ( 14761 )
    maybe i missed something.. but how would requiring a windows computer make ballot-stuffing any more difficult than not requiring one?

    were you required to be using some propeitary MSN voting program? even then, couldn't you just uninstall and reinstall the voting program? or have a script do it for you?

    or did they just assume those wild, open-source fanatic linux users and the tree-hugging hippie mac users would be the only ones unethical enough to ballot-stuff?

    would it really have been that difficult for microsoft to take the segfault.org strategy and just log IPs? sure, you could still ballot-stuff if you had a lot of shells or were in a computer lab or had a dynamic IP, but at least you'd be limited by the number of shells or computers or IPs available. as opposed to any other method, whereby ballot-stuffing would be nearly impossible to hinder..

    please explain.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Kasparov "Gazza" alias "Animal" has long been identified as the top GM in the post 80's era. HE has in the past also been involved in several controversial wins/draws... the most famous when he cheated against women Super GM Judit Polgar a couple of years ago and forced a draw. His skills in chess politicking as is his natural brilliance in the game have allowed him to remain at the helm for so long.This is clearly evident by his avoiding of world championship matches against the 2nd & 3rd best players in the world for the past couple of years.Even this year he postponed his match against the Speed king Vishy Anand. I would not see this opportunity of squirming a win with the help of MS support beneath him.
  • by Sloppy ( 14984 ) on Monday October 18, 1999 @04:07AM (#1605447) Homepage Journal

    Laugh it up, while you can. But someday it's going to be a game of Solitaire -- and then the Windows users will kick everyone else's asses.


    ---
  • Q: "Would this have been posted had any other company than Microsoft been running the show?"

    A:Yes!

    Any other high-profile company that had promoted a similar competitive event this much, had made the same claims MSN did, and had then acted in the same manner, would have opened itself up to the same criticism. The word "Microsoft" in this story is not particularly relevant.

    The main reason this story is here is so that other online gamemasters can learn from the mistakes described - and not repeat them.

    - Robin "roblimo" Miller

  • I have the server if you want. P3 550, 256 megs ram, ethernet to the backbone, Linux. I haven't thought of something useful to do with it yet, this may be it.
  • In the name of fairness, Kasparov should offer a draw. Obviously, what is transpiring is an insult to the noble game to which he has devoted his life.

    This would be a great opportunity for a Linux-related company (VALinux, RedHat, etc.) to approach Kasparov and try to persuade him to give this a second chance, with a more thought-out voting system, and an open adjudication process. It would be a heck of a PR coup for Linux, and a case study in debunking Microsoft's "Linux Myths".
  • Would this have been posted had been any other company than Microsoft running the show

    Yes. Slashdot posted at least some stuff when Kasparov faced the BGig Blue. And IBM defintely did not have to change the rules in mid game or behave pathetically.

  • by shr ( 13954 )
    Mistakes happen and sometimes things just go wrong. Slashdot is news with a slant (or at least a more obvious slant than other media).

    If this was really just MS being stupid, then I wonder if any Linux, Mac, or SUN supporting company would be willing to step forward and create a "rematch done right".

    I wonder if Kasparov had some of non-compete clause in his contract with MS; that would be amusing.

  • "...cheated against women Super GM Judit Polgar..."

    He cheated? How did he do that?
  • by XDG ( 39932 ) on Monday October 18, 1999 @04:26AM (#1605455) Journal
    People seem to be forgetting that Kasparov vs. The World is really just a PR gambit. It promotes the MS gaming site "The Zone" (in MS's interests) and it promotes the game of chess (in GK's interests). It really wasn't set up as some sort of great test of "electronic democracy" -- ensuring the impossibility of cheating wasn't tops in the organizers minds. That notion is a construct of the tech and cyber heads who are making more of this than it was ever intended to be.

    People seem to want it both ways. First, this is a great test of "collective thinking" against the world champion, and then second, they get upset because the Krush/Kasparov duel got interrupted for technical reasons and they were forced to think for themselves.

    And the suggestion that Kasparov might cheat is ludicrous.

    As a separate aside, on the topic of whether this game "proves" that Krush and several grandmasters and lots of computer time can produce moves at Kasparov's level, I'll quote analyst commentary from move 3 about Kasparov's choice of move:

    DANNY KING MOVE 3 COMMENTARY

    One of the old masters once said: "When I give check I fear no one!", but don't panic, we can get out of this one easily.

    Garry's own comment to his move is revealing:

    "It seems that young coaches are trying to force me to play against my favourite Najdorf! Due to forthcoming match with Vishy I have to refrain from public theoretical duel. So please forgive me for selecting unattractive 3 Bf1-b5+."

    Let me explain:

    In the latter part of the year, most likely October till mid November, there is a good chance that Garry Kasparov will be defending his World title in a match against the world no.2, Vishy Anand from India. At this moment both players will be beginning their intense preparation for the match, including research on their opening repertoires.

    It is therefore understandable that Garry wishes to reveal nothing of his future plans and so avoids the move which is generally accepted as the most critical - 3 d4 leading to an open game, rich in fighting possibilities for both sides - and turns to the bishop check, generally leading to a more closed position. The World Champion describes the move as 'unattractive', possibly because it could lead to the early exchange of pieces after, for instance, 3...Bd7, when ideally he would like to maintain as much tension as possible.

    So, yes, Krush and "The World" can rival Kasparov... as long as he isn't trying his hardest.

    -XDG

  • And IBM defintely did not have to change the rules in mid game or behave pathetically. Don't compare apples with pears.
  • Requiring an unique IP would exclude all but one user behind each NAT-based corporate firewall. I have 300 analytical chemists here, many of whom play chess, and quite possibly more than one of whom might participate in something like this. Do you think they would be happy to learn that only one person in our company would be allowed to submit votes?
  • by Anonymous Coward
    "In the name of fairness, Kasparov should offer a draw." Huh? Kasparov should give up winning because his opponents are a sniviling back-stabbing rule-twisting committee? He should go ahead, win, and flaunt the moral and technical superiority of the lone player over the mobocracy.
  • How exactly does one become a grand master in chess? Do you have to win a certain # of matches against highly ranked opponents? Is there a chess board somewhere that deems one a 'grand master'?
  • Many folks have been sceptical on this "Kasparov vs. The World" claim for the past few months.
    Ask yourself one simple question, why haven't the votes for "The World" been released?
  • I realize it's not an ideal solution, but please present another solution, then. I am eager to hear of any ideas which are superior, and I think others here could benifit from these suggestions.

    I certianly understand your point, but ballot-stuffing is an unacceptable risk, ask MS has so kindly shown for us.

    NAT and dynamic-IP are bastardations of the standard. They are necessary, but they break so many things like this.

    What would you suggest? Fully authenticated users with confirmed e-mail addresses? Is that worth the effort on the part of the users? It'll have to be server-side so there's no possibility of cheating.

    Eagerly awating any suggestions for solutions to this kind of problem. Perhaps it's time for an "Ask Slashdot"?
  • by Anonymous Coward
    He had an extra queen up his sleeve.
  • I agree, I don't see how you can call this a game against the "World" when most of the world team is just following the advice of an expert. Its just a slow moving chess game between Kasparov and Krush where the "World Team" is just a pawn (excuse the pun) that moves the pieces for Krush.

    It would be interesting to see a game against the world where each of the World Team members had to make thier decision on thier own....
  • GNUChess + XBoard. A very serious contender. Better than Chessmaster in MY experience, which is seriously limited since I suck at chess.
  • by Kintanon ( 65528 ) on Monday October 18, 1999 @04:49AM (#1605468) Homepage Journal
    How exactly does one become a grand master in chess? Do you have to win a certain # of matches against highly ranked opponents? Is there a chess board somewhere that deems one a 'grand master'?


    Chess has a point rating system determined by sancitoned tournament play. The higher ranked your opponent the more points you can gain from beating them. If I remember correctly Grandmaster is 100 thousand points. I might be very very wrong about that, but it's what I remember.

    http://www.igl.net/echess/
    uses a simpler Ladder system of ranking whereby you start out unranked, then play up the ladder by defeating opponents above you. This is the simplest form of ranking system.

    http://www.chess.net
    may have more info on ranking systems somewhere, but I couldn't find it.

    http://www.ishipress.com/chess.htm
    Has a LOT of Chess info, including info on previous grandmasters and world champs.

    http://www.worldfide.com/
    Is the website for one of the major world chess organizations.

    http://www.ishipress.com/ratingre.htm
    Has information about the current rating system and its problems.

    I hope this helps, if you need more info on anything e-mail me or ask me here.

    Kintanon
  • So have a vote behind the firewall, and send out a move for 'the company' - morale-building, teamwork, all that rot. Or encourage them to enter the game from home.

    C'mon, you guys are analysts - ya should be able to figure out some kind of non-whiny solution here.
  • There is a chess scoring system. You play, you win, and your rating goes up depending on who you play. The US scoring system is available from here [uschess.org] among other places.

    TML

  • I have been following the game the whole time. I really for sorry for Irina Krush because she put forth so much effort and is now going to lose. If you go to the zone now you will see that she has posted no analysis. I'm sure this is because she feels she has been cheated. It could also be because no matter what move she recommends "the World" is going to lose.
  • I personally don't like Irina Krush and I don't like the way she plugs her web site in her analysis on MSN. Her comments are usually longer than the others, but they are also harder to read.

    I think Etienne Barcrot is a much better end game player and I choose to vote for his moves over Irina Krush.

    This tournament isn't Irina Krush vrs Kasparov, its the World vrs Kasparov. So if Irina misses sending in her analysis, so be it. Its not cheating on Microsoft's part. Etienne missed several analysis while playing in the French Championship and I'm not complaining.



  • by Anonymous Coward
    After move 30 or so, Kasparov said he'd spend over 100 hours of analysis so far. He really tried his best.

    The world trully played a good game. And it's not like it was Irina Krush playing and the world just following blindly. The BBS was a great source and forum for excelent analysis where Irina her self partisipated alot and gave and recieved many Ideas and lines which she used and posted on her move analysis page.

    The world trully played better as a unity than any one individual on the team. It sort of reminded me of ESR's saying: "Given enough eyeballs, every bug is shallow". In this match it was alot of eyeballs and players analysing on the bbs. And the world did great. But then MS f*cked up.
  • Doesn't that sound a lot like the name of a Bond Girl(TM)? (No offense to the lady in question)

    Also, a quick perusal of the portaits of the analysts will show that Irina definately has the most professional-looking (and attractive) photo. Might I suggest that this may have played a role in her moves being selected almost every time? The picture of Mr. Felecan is just awful. Mr. Bacrot and Ms. Pätz look a bit better in their photo's, but I think that most would agree that Ms. Krush looks a lot more professional and attractive. In a game where experts of approximately equal skill disagree, it seems unlikely that 'The World' would have a clue who's move is really 'better'. I think it is more likely that the analysts charisma played more of a role in deciding who's move was selected than anything else.

    Also, if you take a peek at msn's main page, you will notice that while there was almost always a link to the match previously, there is none now. I found a link to it after a few minutes of clicking, but the match is definately no longer being played up as much as it was. Sounds like microsoft is trying to sweep it under the table and let this whole thing die a quiet death.

  • by jd ( 1658 ) <imipakNO@SPAMyahoo.com> on Monday October 18, 1999 @05:10AM (#1605480) Homepage Journal
    If I wanted Kasparov to win, I'd exclude all the top competitors and effectively ban the input of the top opponent.

    If I were sexist, or elitist, I'd also eliminate the top woman chess player.

    Of course, MSNBC couldn't possibly be doing any of these things. They're -far- too mature and sensible. Honest!

    IMHO, this shows how emotional corruption is just as insidious and destructive as any other kind. Banning views contrary to their own is no way to run an open tournament. If that's how they want to play, why aren't they just entering their own moves? It would be more honest of them to do so!

    As far as ballot-stuffing is concerned, they are =QUITE= capable of preventing that. They have NO excuse, whatsoever. Even using cookies would limit it, though if they wanted to be a bit more thorough, they could be issuing browser-side certificates. A simple check for IP address, cookie and/or certificate, and rate of vote entry would effectively block most trivial forms of ballot stuffing.

    But, no! MSNBC insists that people play fair, unless they don't like the move, in which case it's cheating, and they'll insert their own preference instead.

    Sorry, but cheating by admins is just as unacceptable, in MY book, as cheating by anyone else. There can be NO exceptions.

    As for "but... but... our mail server didn't get the message!" - Quit the whining! First off, I don't believe that, in the least. MSNBC's mail system is perfectly adequate for the job, and mail queues are typically set to 30 minutes, not 3 hours. Secondly, if MSNBC's mail servers AREN'T capable of handling the load, it's their responsibility to upgrade them, and ensure that their systems can support their users, NOT the job of the users to compensate for the failings of MSNBC.

    P.S. To whom it may concern - a typo is an emergency, but an entry by the most successful panelist is a mere triviality? You wouldn't be planning on running for Congress, would you?

  • by wilkinsm ( 13507 ) on Monday October 18, 1999 @05:10AM (#1605481)
    I was following the game on a day by day basis. Things I learned:

    1) Given a good leader, the world put up a damn good fight. I'm not sure how many positions were analized but it was really a good group effort. Even deep blue would have been in trouble.

    2) Style is everything. There where several points in the game where the world could play offensively or defensely. For the most part, the world played offensively almost with reckless abandon.

    3) MS sucks. They really tryed their hardest to put the world at an disadvantage. Only one of the anylists was allowed to follow the discussion board, and they where not allowed to talk to each other.

    4) Trolls suck. The discussion board was full of garbage posts and flamebait - it was a wonder that anything got done. On top of that, any Joe that came along could vote what he liked without even discussing the alternatives.

    5) I want a replay. PR stunt or not, most of us in the know learned a ton of stuff from GK. My rateing probally has tripled since the start of the game. The slow pace was nice, kind of like a school class. I'd like to see more games played (or at least followed) this way.
  • People seem to want it both ways. First, this is a great test of "collective thinking" against the world champion, and then second, they get upset because the Krush/Kasparov duel got interrupted for technical reasons and they were forced to think for themselves.

    My understanding is that it's a BBS bulletin board that Krush "leads" that came up with the fact that move 58 chosen by the other analysts was a losing move. Not Krush alone. So, they were thinking for themselves, and then their move wasn't one available to vote for. That would piss me off too.

    So, yes, Krush and "The World" can rival Kasparov... as long as he isn't trying his hardest

    Kasparov apologetics? I'm not buying it. I bet Kasparov wouldn't either. He knew he was going to have to go for an alternate in the opening, he chose the one he was happiest with.
  • No, Kasparov should give up winning because the contest was incompetently administered and there's a good chance he would not have won had it been fair. That would be the sporting thing to do. Then he could challenge the world to a rematch if/when the bugs get ironed out.
  • Problem is, there are no real "rights" when it comes to discrimination in the internet. If I want to put up a site that is viewable only by Netscrape users, I can and should be able to do that. If this well-publicized chess match, sponsored by M$N, was accessable only if you were a paying customer of the MSNetwork, then all you can really do is bitch and complain. It sucks, but its not illegal or "wrong" (I guess), its marketing.

    -davek

  • Not to change the subject too much, but my mind was wandering.

    Anybody have any ideas on how well chess games would work in a distributed environment? Some problems are more suited for distributed processing than others, and if chess is... then some interesting options come up.

    Kasparov vs. the computers of the world, or computers A of the world vs. computers B of the world. The last one (A vs. B) seem most interesting to me: let two groups come up with their own method of distributing parts of the cpu cycles out, let them fight it out and see who's got the best code.
  • Interesting idea.

    There are quite a few possibilities for organizing such a game.

    Direct democracy - count votes for each move.

    Experts suggest, majority vote as MSN did.

    Irina Krush as benevolent dictator, with a slashdot-like BBS infrastructure.

    Irina Krush as benevolent dictator, with move trees assigned to sub-teams (maybe farm out further moves to sub-sub-teams recursively) who report their analysis of each position upward until it ends up in a database Irina inspects and selects from.

    Same as above except position analyses are weighted numerically to choose the move.

    There are some very interesting experiments in the management of distributed activities waiting to happen here.
  • Eagerly awating any suggestions for solutions to this kind of problem. Perhaps it's time for an "Ask Slashdot"?



    *cough*uniqueprocessorids*cough*


    :) SEE! NOW you understand why Intel was so hip on PIDs. It was all a ploy to help out with ballot-stuffing on the M$ game zone. - And people say that they don't think ahead.

    --

    Blue
  • I'm interested in how they disqualified the second ballot-stuffing attempt but not the first ... doesn't this give the message that protesting against their behaviour is less acceptable than cheating in a public game that they administer?
  • I don't think he took David Letterman's moves
    seriously, years ago, either.

    Some kinda power elite thing goin' on here!

    DW.
  • X-Board and GNUChess are nice (thanks Tim Mann!), but GNUChess is actually weaker than the ChessMaster engine. I would guess GNUChess would be rated around 2200+, while ChessMaster would be roughly around 2400+. Also, GNUChess does tend to have problems losing on time. In fact it is the only chess engine I have ever beaten on time.
  • Chess has a point rating system determined by sancitoned tournament play. The higher ranked your opponent the more points you can gain from beating
    them. If I remember correctly Grandmaster is 100 thousand points. I might be very very wrong about that, but it's what I remember.


    Mostly right up to the 100 thousand points part. Kasparov probably has a rating somewhere between 2600-2800. Actually, to get GrandMaster status, you need a combination of rating and a certain amount of success in sanctioned tournaments. Ratings go something like this:
    2000 = expert
    2200 = master
    2400 = ???

    After achieving Master rating, you can become an International Master, and/or a grandmaster by entering enough sanctioned tournaments and doing well enough in them. To keep Grandmaster status, you need to keep it up.

    I'm probably wrong on some details, but that's the gist of it.
  • It woulnd't be interesting at all. We would lose within the first 20 moves.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    I am no MS fan, but this just sounds like a general mess, and a lame and stupid quick-fix. Perhaps they should have implemented better security systems, but its not as if Distributed.net doesn't get hacked. One of the problems with these things is its obviously very different to prevent cheating.. I think a better system might have been a tournament ladder and let the winners play him or something.
  • <ConspiracyTheory perp=M$ target=M$OSpeons>

    A cute little program, in the guise of a harmless chess voting mechanism, would scoop out the unique ID from Intel processors and send that (along with pertinent information about the programs you run, the sites you've most recently visited, and your views on the Intergalactic Treason Situation [slashdot.org]) to M$ Headquarters in Redmond.

    A crack team of dolphins pour over the data (leftovers from the specially bred torpedo carriers of WW2) and make recommendations as to your suitability for future acquisition... Commencing after MS's current plans of controlling software entirely, is the inevitable next step of Embracing and Extending individual people [tjseclectic.com], much as M$'s CEO has already undergone.

    Your identity would then be subsumed into the growing colective of Micro$oft Lobbyists [slashdot.org], used to provide the public appearance of legality and disinformation about the truth that M$ controls the entire US puppet-state government. (You'll notice that no media outlet actually specified which 'Bill' left a deposit on Ms. Lewinsky's dress...)

    Don't make it easy for them! Play hopscotch, jai-alai or mazola twister instead! Throw a wrench into thier plans for domination, before they stick a wrench into you!

    </ConspiracyTheory>

    --
    rickf@transpect.SPAM-B-GONE.net (remove the SPAM-B-GONE bit)

  • Yes he should. The Game was vs The World. Not vs Microsoft. Why should MS's incompitance ruin the game for The World?
  • We could do it the annoying way, and make it have to do a confirmation reply to enter successfully. Who would want to confirm x different accounts just to vote?
  • Then it should not have been marketed as "Kasparov versus The World" -- it should have been marketed as "Kasparov versus Windows Users".

    But we all know that there is a very low correspondance between marketing and reality...

    -=-=-=-=-

  • While I agree that Silex's message is probably flamebait the way it was written he probably does have a point. I would hazzard to guess that the average Unix user has a higher IQ than the average Windows user. Why? Well, everyone keeps saying that Unix is so hard to use, right? And everyone keeps saying that Windows is so easy, right? Then it logically follows that the average Unix user would be more intelligent than the average Windows user. This is true more so when you consider that the number of people that choose to learn Unix and be proficient instead of being "forced" to use it is probably larger now than it has ever been. Certainly people who choose to learn difficult things instead of taking the "easy" road intellectually would be more intellectual as a result. Perhaps Unix users and Windows users had the same "intellect" before they started, but I can't help to think that the process of learning has the tendancy to increase your intellect. If that's the case then Unix users have to have a higher intellect than Windows users because of all the learning they have had to do.

    Mark it down as flamebait if you want, but I believe this to be at least an arguably sound logical conclusion given the facts.
  • People seem to be saying that this either (1) is gratuitous MS-bashing on /.'s part, or (2) doesn't merit attention because it was just some silly PR move.

    1. MS-bashing, well, yes. Gratuitous, no. The events of this match gave the lie to many things MS said about it, and many things they say about themselves. Notably, this whole "we just want to enable people to be their best" hogwash. They seek control, as the final death throes of this game demonstrate.
    2. PR move, yes. So if MS demonstrates the weaknesses of its own model in the course of this PR move, should critics of MS let them spin it all away? I don't think so.
    If, say, FIDE had set this up and done these things, it wouldn't have gotten on /., nor should it have. (Except that this might be a new way of collaborating using web technology -- seems like "news for nerds" to me.) If it all shook down the same, it might indict their quality as a chess organization, but that's all.

    MS's mishandling indicts their role as a company producing technology to enable this kind of gee-whiz collaboration, and as responsible stewards of this technology. The way in which they screwed up leaves concerns about MS's qualifications in that area. It would have been the same if Sun or IBM or Red Hat had done this. And just as deserving of an article here, IMO.

    phil

  • Hasnt the great Kasparov been given enough abuse from deep blue? This additional microsoft fiasco with poor site management adds insult to injury. MSFT dropped the ball.
  • Just wondered, if her E-Mail may have been sent from a non-MS platform... Probably not, but you never know.
  • What I don't understand about what microsoft did, is why'd they only allow windows users? I twas supposed to be kasparov vs WORLD not kasparov vs windows. If I could've voted at the beginning of the game I would've, but since only windows users could (and I didn't feel like firing up vmware), no voting for me.

    ah well, shouldn't have expected anything else from them..
  • I wouldn't call this rigging. The fact is that 'Steps' were being voted for by a load of prepubescent girlies and somebody drew a load of students' attentions to that. They (having a slightly better taste in music) voted accordingly.

    Just depends whose shoes you're standing in I guess.

    Nick.
  • That's just sick. Of course, beyond that, it's really just another `Microsoft Sucks... Bill Sucks... Plungers Suck' Type of an article. With the exception that now Microsoft has insulted the best chess player in the world of course. To me, that's a little like giving the pope a melvin.

    Target Practice
  • Microsoft didn't deliever again. [msn.com]

    It would seem clear by this point, to all involved, that it is no easier or harder to make a web-based collaborative effort than any other colaborative effort. Certainly, we see this was a complex and large scale system that wasn't adequately supported by Microsoft, but was the failing in underestimating the amount of work needed to make everyone happy?

    It's not easy to get thousands of people to cooperate on a large project, and especially hard for one person to hold it up alone as Mrs. Kush tried to do. I for one think the failure is with microsoft- not for failing, but for promising too much and not delivering.

    We've seen a lot of that, come to think of it.

    -Ben

  • How exactly does one become a grand master in chess? Do you have to win a certain # of matches against highly ranked opponents? Is there a chess board somewhere that deems one a 'grand master'?

    The world chess federation [fide.com] adopted a rating system devised by Professor Arpad Elo [chesslinks.org]. Players start off with a base value and have points added or subtracted to their rating on the basis of how they fare against their opponents in a tournament. So if your rating is 2400 and the average rating of your opponents in a tournament is 2300, you are expected to have a positive score against them(ie. win more than lose). Your rating goes up if you score more than the expected amount, down if you score less.

    Grandmaster and International Master titles are awarded when players maintain a certain level of play(determined by calculating number of points that should be scored depending on opponents' ratings) over a certain number of games. There are other requirements, such as a minimum of three grandmasters playing in a tournament for it to qualify as one where grandmaster ``norms'' may be awarded. A collection of at least two grandmaster ``norms'' spanning a certain number of games(I think 24) qualifies one for the grandmaster title. There are exceptions and other means of being awarded a title. The winner of the world junior championship is awarded a grandmaster norm. If a non-grandmaster qualifies for the Candidates' cycle(to determine a challenger for the world champion), the grandmaster title is automatically awarded. With the political turmoil that exisits in the chess world, this Candidates' tournament no longer exists.

    The GM and IM titles are awarded for life. Ratings change depending on one's performance. A minimum number of rated games must be played per year for a player's rating to be listed. You can search rating lists here [uni-kl.de].

  • Q5-e3, but R5-k6 so 0-0! These people must be idiots! Everyone knows that Q5-34 is suicide, so why then Q3-a4 42.35 Rs01??? K4-e7 check so d4-d5 e46 y r u 1d10ts 1 3M W3R3Z D00DZ%@%@$$#!!!!
  • Since the Kasparov v. World game has several fundamental flaws (Windows only voting, insecure balloting, champion directed moves, arbitrary ballot disqualification, etc), this game should be considered moot.

    I doubt Kasparov will be lured into another one of these games. Instead, it would be a much more interesting proposition to have a World v. World match to investigate the Many_Minds_Cooperating = Greater_Intelligence proposition.

    Suggestions for a World v. World match:
    - Give each participant a unique registered voter ID
    - Set up a move market exchange instead of pure voting for moves, ala the Foresight Idea Exchange [ideosphere.com]
    - Do not allow mixing between sides. Market exchange is split into two seperate exchanges.
    - Restrict players to only one side. No spying. (Q: how to implement to eliminate spying and sandbagging? This is a problem analogous to secure credit-card transactions, only worse.)
    - Have GrandMasters do a postmortem analysis of the game, but no live analysis of moves.


    IV
  • It's interesting to see that Microsoft seems to think it can dominate whatever field they want to and refuses to admit any wrongdoing when things fall down around them. This seems very similar to when Microsoft made vendors pay for Windows whenever they sold a computer (Microsoft thinking they could dominate a field) and then refusing to admit wrongdoing when the DOJ called them on the fact that what they were doing was an illegal business practice. Is Microsoft doomed to repeat history over and over again and how can their general cluelessness help the Open Source community?
  • Read this:
    http://bbs.msnbc.com/bbs/kasparov-team/posts/od/ 94732.asp
    Still think it's a simple cock-up? I'd argue
    that MS's main problem is not of technical
    nature - but rather their attitude throughout
    the game. I can understand glitches, I can't
    understand coverups, especially when they are so
    needless that the only reason for them seems to
    be MS overall corporate climate.
    Here's what MS could have done: have basic
    security (at least a SETI level authentication),
    show vote counts, have a 24/7 staffer(s) to
    update their web page - this is after all the
    "easy to maintain" Microsoft system they are
    running, better yet - allow analysts to submit
    their recommendations via the web (with
    authentication). If they have a problem - come
    out and say so.
    They had other problems as well - like
    (a)pathetic analysts of which only one cared,
    a web page that doesn't draw correctly on
    different platforms, lack of basic chess
    functionality such as offer draw and resign
    buttons, incorrect timing shown on their
    web page (the world had 24 hours but the page
    would make you believe at times that you had
    less), bad BBS system - I wished they used slash.
    Technical problems were just too numerous to
    put forth here. I'd argue once again that this
    was not a simple cock-up.
  • when a democratic society has certain necessary features.

    The fundamental reason democracy works better than tyranny is that the best solution for any given problem is more likely to come from the minds of 250 million individuals than from one. No matter how smart the tyrant is, the odds are seriously balanced such that someone else in the masses has had an experience or an insight that makes his opinion on the issue at least equally relevant.

    However, there are also 249,999,999 people in that mass who don't know the best solution. Therefore the one person who knows must be free to speak his mind, and the others must have the minimum level of intelligence necessary to recognize his contribution. This is critical because the main thing masses are good at is shouting loudly; quality of thought, not quantity, is the key to successful democracy.

    Microsoft's online democracy tried to emulate this successful paradigm, and came very close; apparently IK was a pretty good match for GK when assisted by the other panelists, powerful computers, and the lack of time constraints. Unfortunately, the system was flawed in such a way that the voice of reason was not heard from at a critical time... and the match was lost. Democracy qua Microsoft fails miserably.

    A better test of democracy qua Democracy as an allegory for our civilization would have been Gary Kasperov vs. the World in a multi-competition consisting of Chess, Backgammon, Parcheesi, and Quake. Possibly with some other skills such as metalworking, water skiing, lion taming or French cooking thrown in. While GK may be the greatest chessmaster in the world, I have a feeling Thresh is a better cook.

    Scudder
  • I'm just wondering if Mr. Kasparov would agree to a rematch held outside of the bounds of the Microsoft Network, i.e., fully held on the World Team Strategy BBS. From the transcript, it seems like the consensus (such as it was w/o Microsoft forcing the vote) was giving him a pretty good game.

    I also feel sorry for Kasparov. It seems like he's being forced to do "stunts" just so he can get a decent game. Playing the world, playing Deep Blue, etc. If there aren't any grandmasters on the verge of genius, I might humbly suggest Ms. Krush be the next opponent for Mr. Kasparov.

    It almost makes me want to get my board out again...
    _____
  • if somebody in the open source would have done this, it would have been much better

    actually, up until recently, according to this article, microsoft hadn't screwed it up too horribly

    i think there should be a rematch with another gaming service (maybe one that mostly specializes in chess)
  • err make that open source world would have on the first line


    *doh* i guess preview is a good idea
  • The reality is that nobody really cares in what happens in the game. This is nothing more than a big publicity stunt for M$ and Kasparov (both of whom just want more money). If you talk on the chess servers, you'll see this is the case. For me and many others, I've never cared one bit about the match.

    Kasparov is likely the top chess player right now, however he isn't world champion because he refuses to play under FIDE rules. He just needs the publicity to remind people who he is.

    Sorry if this sounds like a troll. But this is really how it is.
  • Just goes to show you that anything that big is gonna be buggy the first time around. The fact that it is microsoft is just something else to notice. :)

    I wonder if someone else (AOL, Mindspring) had handeled it, if it would have come out differently?

    People need to realize that although it is a huge thing, and totally incredible that Kasparov would do it, it IS the first time something like that had been tried.

    The soiled few will always try to ruin it for the rest of us..
  • by MassacrE ( 763 ) on Monday October 18, 1999 @07:38AM (#1605533)
    - Qd1-e2
    - Ke1-f1
    - Orange
    - Merangue
    - Hemos Sucks/Rob Sucks/Kasperov Sucks
  • I share your views. The World did indeed play extremely well. If, as it seems to be the case, that Irina and her 'team' were the best of the coaches, then the World is to be credited for seeing this and going with it.

    I think even m$ fuckup did a lot for this. It has certainly brought the experiment a lot of new eyeballs and commentary.

    -- Reverend Vryl

  • Would this have been posted had been any other company than Microsoft running the show?

    Would this have happened at all if another company were running things?

    I doubt ZDnet would've made such pathetic attempts at PR damage control, and they certainly wouldn't've had a Windows only requirement for their vote script to work. Any webmaster who puts up a poll (even an idiotic "boxers or briefs" type poll) without IP verification should be shot.

    Using Microsoft software is like having unprotected sex.

  • I can't think of anything more brilliant to say than ...this is a damned good idea (a well-thought-out Linux challenge).

    Microsoft clearly relies on it's FUD not simply to garner support from businesses but the average Joe as well. Unfortunately, Average Joe reads CNN.com and is happy with that. CNN.com takes the carrot like a rented mule. And like another /.er posted, lather, rinse, repeat. So I don't expect that such a coup would really change things, but it'd be nice to have yet another high profile incidence to sic our friends and relatives unto.

    I can't decide if I agree with you on the draw aspect tho. Clearly it would be the "sportsman-like" thing for him to do, but I'm not really sure that's his responsibility in this case.

    My .02
    Quux26
  • by Jamie Zawinski ( 775 ) <jwz@jwz.org> on Monday October 18, 1999 @08:06AM (#1605540) Homepage
    ``Chess is the most violent of all sports ... There's no sport as competitive -- yes, I'll say as rough -- as chess. The only goal in chess is to prove your superiority to the other guy, and the most important superiority, the most total one, is the superiority of the mind... There is real chess and women's chess. Some people don't like to hear this, but chess does not fit women properly. It's a fight, you know? A big fight...It's the logic of a fighter, a professional fighter. Women are weaker fighters. There is also the aspect of creativity in chess. You have to create new ideas. That's quite difficult, too. Chess is the combination of sport, art, and science. In all these fields, you can see men's superiority. Just compare the sexes in literature, in music or in art. The result is, you know, obvious. Probably the answer is in the genes.''
    • -- Garry Kasparov, 1989

    Then he was beaten by a machine and went down in history for it.

  • *cough*uniqueprocessorids*cough*

    MUST... NOT... FLAME...

    MUST... KEEP... CONTROL...

    Ahahahaha. No. :-)

  • by Black Parrot ( 19622 ) on Monday October 18, 1999 @08:18AM (#1605543)
    In the small, agreed -- BFD. But in the large, it tells the world that the HotMail fiasco changed nothing at Micorsoft.

    After the first prankster pointed out the problem, the MS team examined their code as came back with a "no way". So a second (external) guy had to verify it. And not only did he do that, but without access to the code he came back with a different way to break it. Two exploits, and the MS team couldn't tell by looking at their own code? Even after having one of the exploits pointed out to them?

    And of course when they couldn't deny it anymore they came back with their standard quick fix: turn off features. When will they learn to examine features before they implement them? And simply not implement them if they are inherently insecure?

    So this is important with respect to what it tells the world about Micorsoft's corporate culture. And their ability/willingness to learn from similar mistakes in the past.

    Or perhaps they merely didn't put their best people on it? But you'd have to wonder about a company that sets up a high-visibility PR stunt and doesn't bother to staff it to succede. Don't they care about anything? If they don't put their top people on their own PR ventures, what kind of people are they going to put on the things I need?

    No explanation seems to give them a clean slate. Sure, security is hard and bugs happen, but that's all the more reason to be able to respond promptly and appropriately.

    The only reason not to view this as a big pie in MS's face is the fact that it's about the 100th pie this year, and individual pies just don't make much difference anymore.

    --
    It's October 6th. Where's W2K? Over the horizon again, eh?
  • Crafty is more powerful than GNUChess. However I don't believe that the strength of either engine is modifiable. This fact certainly matters if you are not master strength.
  • Seriously, the idea of Slashdot vs. Kasparov is silly. The MSN game was really Krush and a few other grandmasters and computers vs. Kasparov.

    A Slashdot vs. Slashdot game might be entertaining, though it wouldn't likely be a very good game. Also, that's really not the point of slashdot. That type of event would be better for a game site, not a news site.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    I agree that verification is important, in practice however it is not that easy.

    IP verification would not work, the average dial-up user has access to a few hundred IP's at least. All he has to do is to disconnect and redial the POP. A sysadmin anywhere might have access to a few hundred or even a few million IP's.

    So what are the alternatives. A valid email address, verified by sending a password to the account is a reasonable start, but most people who own a domain have the option of a few dozen email addresses or even "star addressing" (i.e. *@somedomain.com will go to the main account), so this turns out to be even easier to spoof. A PGP message signed by the individual sounds like it should be fullproof, but of course anyone can have any number of PGP keys.

    As far as I can tell (and correct me if I'm wrong), but the best an identification method using only the internet can hope to do is to assure me that the person attesting to be John Doe is the same person that attested to be John Doe yesterday (or an authorized agent). It is much harder to say that John Doe is the same person that said they were Jane Doe yesterday.

    There are a couple of ways around this problem, you can link the ID method to a unique ID controlled by the government such as a SSN or Driver's License number. This does not prevent identity theft but it is more expensive for the possible cheater (as well as being more expensive for the service provider). You could demand a high level Verisign certificate (which require a face to face meeting for issuance and are expensive). The easiest way to give yourself a reasonable assurance of unique identifiers is to charge a fee for your service and demand unique credit cards. Few people will cheat if it means spending more money (and if they do you probably don't care).

    If unique internet identity becomes important in our brave new world there will have to be some serious consideration and possibly government involvement in the issue. I'm not completely convinced that uniqueness is necessary for most things. It is important that the credits I use are authentic but that doesn't necessarily require that I am in fact me. A smart card with onboard processing could handle the authentication in hardware. It will be important in issues such as on line voting and other legal interactions. For that, the only nearly foolproof method I can think of is some kind of implanted smartcard. Any physiological method such as retinal scan or fingerprint could be spoofed by hacking the input device or the information transmission.

    In the end, perhaps it is not essential to make cheating foolproof. Our current system certainly isn't, as evidenced by identity theft and voter fraud, but it works pretty well in most cases.
  • See the distributed.net Projects page [distributed.net]. Specifically, scroll down a bit to the "Possible Projects" section.

    distributed.net used to host a mailing list for the discussing the possiblity of a distributed chess system; however, all references to the list seem to have disappeared from their web site. Also missing are any archives of the list discussions, which is unfortunate because a great many very smart people involved themselves in some wonderful discussions on that list.*

    The web page does provide the email address of one Remy de Ruysscher, who may be contacted regarding work on the creation of a distributed chess module for the v3 Bovine clients. You may be able to obtain more information that way.

    * This is not to to imply that I in any way participated in those discussions. My knowledge of both chess and distributed computing are limited enough that silently lurking was my most helpful contribution.



  • it's not just my copy of the Exchange IMS MTA that quietly hides email for a few hours

    Only a few hours? you're lucky! I'm not sure what email agent MSN uses, but I sent a test email from my friends MSN account to my personal account. I sent the email in May. I got the email in my account in late September...

    And they call the postal mail 'snail mail'

    Ender

  • by Anonymous Coward
    The postion was an advatageos one for Polgar, I dont remember wher the game was but garry had to make a choice between i think Na6 and Nb7... I am not too sure. one lead to a draw he other lead to a loss. well..... he played the one leading to a loss let go of his peace for a fraction of a second( Was caught on video tape)and retracted and played the drawing move. The arbiter(Ref...) allowed garry to continueBut boy... Judith raised hell. course Garry denied it all but the tape was ther to see...
  • There are two classes of chess titles: those awarded by simple rating, and those awarded by an international executive body.

    Rating titles (at least in the US) are as follows:

    1200 and below: class E
    1200+: class D
    1400+: class C
    1600+: class B
    1800+: class A
    2000+: Expert
    2200+: Master
    2400+: Senior Master (if rating is sustained)

    For an international title, such as IM or GM, a you must achieve a "norm" in a tournament. The norm is the number of points you must win based on the relative strength of the other players (IM norms being lower than GM norms). You must achieve three of these norms in a fixed period (two years?) to get your title, which is awarded by an international organization at some future date.
  • How about World of Linux vs. World of Windows grudge match? The Mac guys could moderate :)
  • I've been following the match via the email newsletter they've been sending out and I find it very interesting that not even Danny King has mentioned any of this furor in the email. You have to have been keeping up with the online chats and bulletin board to know that the game is pretty much wrecked.

    I don't expect much from Microsoft but I would think that an event like this that is being touted as a way to bring children and a wider overall audience to chess would deserve much better treatment. I've never been a fan of MS software but I've never expected much from them in that area, in this case though, it's not just software and shame on them for it.
  • My mother is a freecell addict. She has won every single game possible by trying seeds 1 to the limit. As far as games won/lost goes, she has won , as of right now, 19,023 games and lost only 19. She's been tempted many times to reset and try for 100% victory over 20,000 games; but the screen is just too pretty for her to erase.


    And yes, she did not cheat. She doesn't even know what the registry is; yet alone how to edit the score table, etc.

  • That whole thing about "once you've let it go, the move is made" is a silly rule anyway. Suppose you're moving a piece across the board and you twitch involuntarily and lose contact with it. Does it make any sense to force you to leave the piece out in the middle of the board?

    Yes, technically, the move was made. That doesn't mean he intentionally cheated, and it doesn't mean he deserved to lose. He only lost touch with it for a split second, and who can say that it was intentional?

    I think the move should be official when you hit the clock. Then it would be completely unambiguous.

    It's pretty petty to complain over a technicality (after all, in a friendly game you'd let it pass unless you're a complete prick), but what do you expect from people whose lives center around a board game?
  • It's getting so that Microsoft is screwing up so bad and so often, that it really does look like a vast Slashdot-wing conspiracy to discredit them. Needless to say that you can still discredit something that has none to begine with. (credibility).

    "The number of suckers born each minute doubles every 18 months."
  • And how do we chose up sides for a World vs. World match?

    Microsoft vs. Linux! C'mon, you know you want it...

  • by dpdx ( 52919 ) on Monday October 18, 1999 @11:00AM (#1605565)
    Let me open by apologizing in advance for what I'm about to post:

    Your Chess Online: Kasparov vs. Slashdot

    Today, we'll be taking suggestions for move 19; as always, the best suggestions (as selected by Slashdot's random moderators) will be submitted to the board.

    CmdrTaco: I wish to apologize for the crashing of the server at move 12; thanks to everyone who alerted me to this emergency...

    JonKatz: "Slashdot's King Pawn opening at Move 1 was an epiphany of chess awareness for geeks and a singular triumph of the Open Source Software (OSS) movement."
    _____
  • In this game, vote stuffing became noticeable and
    aggravating at a level of 100 per person, since
    only few people were dedicated enough to cheat.
    Thus, making a vote registration procedure
    long (10 minutes, say) would alone cut down on
    cheating, especially if you only allow one
    vote per IP address, so one couldn't have several
    Netscapes open and vote a few times at once. Indeed, you'd need about that long to
    make sure a person has a clue before they vote.
    This would quickly weed out people who don't care
    about the game and would make stuffing hard.
    If you cared to promote the game of chess, you
    could prearrange with chess clubs around the
    country and have them authenticate users in
    face to face meetings, providing them with new
    members and also increasing security.
    Ultimately, it comes down to how much you care.
    Neither MS, nor three out four of its analysts
    cared one bit, hence the result.

If all else fails, lower your standards.

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