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Subject: Amateur and Professional

Author: Bruce Moreland

Date: 20:58:38 08/29/01

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Before defining the terms, let's decide why.

The reason to have amateur and professional is to sock it to Chessbase on the
entry fees.

The reason Chessbase should be socked is that they make a lot of money if they
win a title, they will probably usually win a title, and they are generally
already paying a lot of money for stuff anyway.

The problem is to figure out a way that you can sock Chessbase without socking
some college student.  If you sock the college student, the student will not
attend the tournament.

European college student, of course.  American college students can't go,
because the trip costs too much already anyway.

Another problem is that you don't want to do the full-sock on someone who is
selling their thing but is just starting out.

Another problem is what to do about Bob.  He's not professional but he can
diddle with chess crap a lot, so his program is good.  A related problem is what
to do about me, since I'm a pretty heavy duty guy even though I'm amateur.  I
think we should get the amateur rate even though we are serious.  Amateur
shouldn't mean "newbie", and Bob, even though he gets career points for doing
Crafty (I suspect), shouldn't be considered professional.

A professional is someone who is established and who is selling chess programs
for real, as in significant money, significant business.  Examples are
Chessbase, Rebel & co, Ossi's guys before he blew up, etc.

Semi-professional is someone who's probably got a job or who is in college, but
is selling a little bit.  I think this is anyone who is selling a program now,
although if you did the "Young Talents" thing a couple of years ago and are no
longer getting money you are probably not professional anymore.  These are
people who if they were charged the professional rate for tournament entry fees,
would end up spending everything they made and probably more.

Amateurs are people who aren't selling their programs.

Attempts to set rules based upon percentage of income are bad, because dumb
things happen.  You can have someone who is making a quarter million dollars per
year from a business or stocks or something, and making fifty thousand on a
chess program, and they are an amateur, and you have someone else who is
starving to death making fifteen thousand dollars per year on a program, nothing
on anything else, and they are a professional.

Instead we have to do it based upon level of commercialism.  The two extremes
are easy.  The big programs are professional, and those who aren't selling and
who haven't sold are amateur.  The harder ones are people like Vincent, Gerd
Isenberg, Rudolf Hubner, Gromit, the Goliath guy, and so forth.  Some of these
guys have been sporadically kind of professional but they shouldn't end up
paying four times as much on entry fees for the rest of their lives if they stop
selling.

bruce



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