Author: Matthew Hull
Date: 10:34:37 12/09/03
Go up one level in this thread
On December 09, 2003 at 12:54:01, Terry McCracken wrote: >On December 09, 2003 at 11:59:44, Robert Hyatt wrote: > >>On December 09, 2003 at 11:12:05, Terry McCracken wrote: >> >>>On December 09, 2003 at 09:50:53, Robert Hyatt wrote: >>> >>>>On December 09, 2003 at 07:53:51, Sandro Necchi wrote: >>>> >>>>>On December 09, 2003 at 07:36:14, Darse Billings wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>>I have been asked to contribute my views regarding the Shredder vs >>>>>>Jonny game in Graz. (I was in Graz during the WCCC, and I've been >>>>>>involved in similar 3-fold repetition situations in the Computer >>>>>>Olympiad. FWIW, I have the highest arbiter certification awarded >>>>>>by the Chess Federation of Canada: National Tournament Director.) >>>>>> >>>>>> http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsid=1335 >>>>>> >>>>>>This is an interesting situation, but the ruling was entirely correct. >>>>>> >>>>>>The actual circumstances made the decision clear. Anyone who cannot >>>>>>see this needs to check their logic or their knowledge of the rules. >>>>>> >>>>>>The hypothetical issue is more interesting: whether the operator has >>>>>>the right to decline an opportunity to draw. >>>>>> >>>>>>Some people have asserted that the operator does not have that right. >>>>>>They are wrong. >>>>>> >>>>>>Since the operator is given the right to claim a draw on behalf of >>>>>>the program, the natural corollary is that it is *not obligatory* >>>>>>for the operator to do so. Note that this discretionary privilege >>>>>>can also lead to a *win* for the operator's program. The operator >>>>>>is *not* a completely passive entity, nor has that ever been the >>>>>>case in computer chess competitions. >>>>>> >>>>>>The rule in question dates back to a previous era when computer chess >>>>>>was a friendly competition between gentlemen. If that is no longer >>>>>>desirable, then the whole process of claiming a draw (as well as >>>>>>resigning on behalf of the program) must be revisited, and be taken >>>>>>out of the hands of the operator. >>>>>> >>>>>>The exact procedure for claiming a draw by 3-fold repetition is >>>>>>covered in the FIDE rules. If a program follows those steps, then >>>>>>the operator has no say in the matter. Most programmers have better >>>>>>things to do than encoding every niggling detail of the FIDE rules >>>>>>(which were developed for human players). >>>>>> >>>>>>Personally, I prefer to allow the programmer to do what he believes >>>>>>to be right. If I were the arbiter, I would rule accordingly. If a >>>>>>third party suggested or demanded that a programmer do something he >>>>>>believes to be less than honourable, I would hope it was a bad joke, >>>>>>and would dismiss it summarily. >>>>>> >>>>>>It is a sad statement that some non-cooperative participants prefer >>>>>>to use the rules as a weapon, forcing increasingly complex rules to >>>>>>handle minor quibbles (which is an impossible task in the limit; at >>>>>>some point judgement and reason must come into play). >>>>>> >>>>>>Regardless, the case at hand is clear and unambiguous: Jonny did not >>>>>>follow the exact steps for claiming a draw, and the operator's choice >>>>>>to continue the game was legal. Those who have criticized the ICGA >>>>>>on this matter should rethink their position. >>>>>> >>>>>>As a side note, this situation would not have arisen if the programs >>>>>>were required to use a direct communication protocol, like that used >>>>>>for Go competitions. We could also dispense with the physical clocks, >>>>>>leaving the time enforcement (and other technical details, like draw >>>>>>claims) to a referee program in the middle. This places a greater >>>>>>burden on the programmer to satisfy the protocol, and I wouldn't >>>>>>recommend it for friendly events like the Computer Olympiad, but >>>>>>it is long overdue for the World Computer Chess Championship. >>>>>> >>>>>> - Darse. >>>>> >>>>>Hi, >>>>> >>>>>I fully agree. >>>>>This was what I tried to tell to the people in this forum, too. >>>>>I was not in Graz, but I know Stefan is a most correct player and programmer, so >>>>>I have full trust him to do the right thing. >>>>>I must also say that some people in this forum really really disappointed me a >>>>>lot as they are not sportive at all (in my opionion) and too easy to criticize. >>>>>Luckily they are not all, so I will continuo to read posts in this forum. >>>>> >>>>>I like to challenge myself, but to do it within the rules and respecting the >>>>>opponents as well. >>>>> >>>>>Too many people here have the really bad habit to offend other people if they >>>>>think different... >>>>> >>>>>Thanks Darse...I think this was needed to open somebody's eyes... >>>>> >>>>>Sandro >>>> >>>> >>>>This doesn't open _any_ eyes. FIDE rules do not override specific >>>>computer chess rules adopted for the tournament, specifically the rule >>>>about the operator's role in the game, which does _not_ include any >>>>"decision-making" ability. >>> >>>Some people's *eyes* will forever remain *shut*. >> >> >>When the rules are crystal clear, and haven't changed for _years_. I don't >>need "open eyes" to recall the rules, nor how they were misapplied in this >>ridiculous decision... > >These rules are not "Etched In Stone", How does one decide that? > I agree with the ICGA decision. >I looked at it from all angles, and it's crystal clear that the ruling for >continuing the game was the correct one. I reached the opposite conclusion. > >The tournament was _not_ automated, and IMO shouldn't be, people have the final >word, _not_ machines. Then if the operator does not like the move his software has indicated, he can just change it, right? After all, people have the final word, according to you. Is this rule of yours etched in stone? > >When a machine can actually decide for itself, which it can't then the human can >and should. The "machine" flagged a three fold repitition. Game over. But as you say, if the human does not like it that his software flagged the draw, he can just ignore that. And if the program sees a winning move because the other program blundered due to a bug, then the operator can override that winning move and substitue a losing one. After all, the human should have the final word, not the machine. It's not the software that's playing chess ultimately, its the operator. (??????????) > >It was a "machine" decision, to foul up a won game, and humans said no! The contest was between "machines", not humans. You seem to have forgotten that. The player is the machine. If the machine fouls up, the machine pays the price. Game over, dude. > >Actually there were two "machine" decisions that were fouled up, one from Jonny, >incomplete, as it didn't know the 3 move rule draw, The engine and GUI are one. After all, in some engine/GUI combinations, the GUI actually handles the opening phase of the game. Engine and GUI are the chess playing software. Your ignoring of the GUI-flagged-reptition is then manifestly bogus. If a GUI can play half the moves in a game (the opening), then it can surely flag repetition draws. The operator can no more ignore that than he can the GUI decisions about opening moves. >and 0.00 doesn't cut it, and >the of course the horrible glitch in an overwhelming won position by Shredder. Yes. Buggy software should pay the price of it's own bugs. That's part of computer chess. You snooze, you lose. Same with human blunders. IMO, your view on this issue is busted six ways to Sunday. MH > >P.S. The "Fifty Move" rule is another issue which has been mentioned, and it >must be ratified as there are positions that take over 220 moves to win!
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