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Subject: Re: Clarification if Cheating could be excluded from Computerchess

Author: Hans Gerber

Date: 18:53:31 05/08/00

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On May 08, 2000 at 18:20:51, Robert Hyatt wrote:

>On May 08, 2000 at 16:09:41, Hans Gerber wrote:
>
>>On May 08, 2000 at 16:02:51, Robert Hyatt wrote:
>>
>>>On May 08, 2000 at 15:27:15, Hans Gerber wrote:
>>>
>>>>Are you _really_ convinced that cheating could _not_ be excluded? In the past?
>>>>In general? Forever?
>>>
>>>
>>>Absolutely, yes.
>>
>>Well, I have to believe you. Now, the whole problem get's into a new light IMO.
>>
>>Thank you very much. I'll have to digest that one.
>
>
>Here's a way to think about this.
>
>You and I are going to play a match (human vs human).  I am going to cheat, and
>use an SMP crafty to play my moves.  I won't tell you how, yet.  So let's see if
>you can come up with a plan to prevent this from happening...  a plan that is
>realistic (ie we can't play the match on mars).
>
>you already know I am going to be using a box that is not going to fit in my
>pocket (a quad xeon).  How are you going to detect or stop my cheating?  Let's
>go from there...
>
>then we have the remaining issue of instead of me playing, it really is crafty
>sitting there at the table.  How do you make certain that Crafty plays every
>move in the game, with no outside influence (same problem as stopping my
>ability to cheat in our match).  And having it replay every game won't reproduce
>the same moves each time, so that a 'validation run' won't work.
>
>Together, those two issues say "can't be done" to me...


Perhaps I'm not the expert to find a solution. Why not invite the scientists to
invent a possibility. You argue as if such a research would be a waste of time.

Let me ask another question. If a solution for control existed would you accept
my point that normally the scientists had to examin tsuch questions since a long
time? Would you then accept my opinion about Hsu and his interpretation of
science?

As a little note let me state that your stressing the impossibility of  a
continual repetition of the moves in 'parallel' systems is not necessary because
humans also do vary in their judgement. What I'm trying to say is that control
should still be a realistic goal.

A second note to your example one where you played connected with a box. IMO
human chessplayers of the top ranks would never "cheat" with the help of such
boxes. It would lead too far to discuss that in a computerchess group. On the
other side we have scientists and technicians who don't have a high education in
chess. They should make some reflections on how to find controlling mechanisms.
This should be done facing the future reality that the machines get more and
more stronger. The machine should be able to "play" completely on its own
through a complete match. If you want to have it with different personalities,
then do it in advance. At that moment chessplayers would accept a machine as
genuine 'chessplayer'. Then the problem of cheating will be solved.



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