Cheating?
#1
Posted 2016-July-09, 10:56
He (no names) appeared a few weeks back and has just reached over 100 logins. My first suspicions were aroused when he clearly knew a lot amore about navigating his way around BBO than I did. After watching him for a while and noting how he likes to berate his partners for not bidding or playing the most advanced game I formed the view that he may have had a former identity and may have been banned for abuse. Then . . . watching him further I noted long pauses at some critical points of bidding and play. Then one night I watched as he was bidding a hand with a partner in a game where both sides were bidding. He and his partner had a Diamond / Heart fit, he having 4 Hearts to the King and his partner having 5 hearts to the Queen but wrongly and badly his partner had never bid his hearts. With hearts never being bid by his side and with his ops on a bid of 4 Clubs he went silent for 2 minutes and the came back and holding just 4 Hearts he bid 4 Hearts which was lay down. I wondered if he had somehow got a look at his partners hand? I looked at who was on-line kibitzing and there was a player there named zzzz_10895 whos profile I could not see/access and searches since say "no players of that name."
Of course I could (and probably am) totally wrong and this person might just be a brilliant player with a short temper and a low tolerance for normal mortals but. . . . .
Any thoughts?
#2
Posted 2016-July-09, 11:04
You won't hear back as they follow a strict confidentiality protocol but from personal experience they WILL follow up on it.
What is baby oil made of?
#3
Posted 2016-July-09, 11:05
#4
Posted 2016-July-09, 11:15
eagles123, on 2016-July-09, 11:05, said:
I am not ranting and I am not complaining. It's simply pathetic that anyone would to even consider cheating in any game of Bridge not least one which is an on-line game with no results, no prizes, no reward. I posted this here because (out of curiosity) I thought someone might have an explanation for zzzz or might suggest that it wasn't possible to cheat in this way.
#5
Posted 2016-July-09, 11:25
#7
Posted 2016-July-10, 02:32
If you are host, just click on "table" and you will find the options available to exclude kibbers, or for kibbers to ask permission to join. Also, it is always worth checking regularly throughout a session if anyone is watching your table by clicking on "Who's Online" and "Kibitzers". A 'dodgy kibber' might join a few boards in...
I once had some idiot do this to me, and it took a fair few boards to suss out that there was something very untoward going on. Condescending abuse (to his partners - and opponents!) and arrogance, and a controlling streak that allowed him as host to 'boot players' from the table on a whim.
But 'The Badger' had the final laugh, staying on BBO for a couple of hours after it happened, and using Google Translate, telling all players that joined his table what he was like and how he was cheating, so they left immediately after joining and no-one would play with him. Then he tried joining a table not as host, with his 'dodgy kibber' watching, and I made sure that the host was informed and he was booted from table after table on numerous occasions. Poetic justice! (And I received a fair few 'thank yous' too.)
[By the way, my profile is now void and I play under another name, because of some of the idiots on BBO. Thankfully, there are many, many pleasant players on here, and the one or two who have to resort to abuse and/or cheating are in the very small minority}
#8
Posted 2016-July-10, 02:47
zzzz_numbers.That is the way to kibitize yourself.
#9
Posted 2016-July-10, 03:27
The one who was banned was easy to spot. For example, with oppo bidding 1NT-3NT holding KQJ10xx xx Axx xx he lead the diamond ace, finding partner's KQxxx. Of course on a spade lead declarer takes the ace and cashes nine tricks. On another hand he pressed on to seven spades with a trump holding of xx opposite AKJxxx. With plenty of entries he cashed the top honours and dropped the offside queen. Even more blatantly twice he used Blackwood, found an ace missing but went on to bid seven. In both cases partner had an undisclosed void.
What made this cheater particularly bad was the abuse he gave partners, which is why I suspect he may be the same person that you have spotted.
One last piece of evidence. The banned guy played in three tournaments in which kibitzers weren't allowed. He came in the bottom three in each with scores of around 40%.
I suggest that you go to "hand records" and look at how your suspect has done over the last month. Did he ever miss guess a finesse, or fail to reach a good game or slam? Then send the evidence to BBO Abuse. Good luck. We need to keep this site clean.
#10
Posted 2016-July-10, 05:10
At least the hand complained of doesn't seem to have been played by the OP (was he kibitzing?): leastways I can't find any hand matching the description in his 'Hand Records'. Probably just as well.
As it happens, I partnered the OP for a few hands last night. No complaints, neither of partner nor opps. My impression is, by far the majority of BBO'ers are honest decent folk. OK there will always be a small rogue element...
There was one hand, months ago (so don't go searching for it!) where I felt impelled to report suspected cheating. I wasn't playing it (at least, not at that table) nor even kibbing, I found it in the hand records. It went:
I have not omitted any of the bids. 7NT was made, thanks to a 'lucky' finesse or two. If this isn't barefaced cheating....
So yes, it can happen.
#11
Posted 2016-July-10, 13:50
661_Pete, on 2016-July-10, 05:10, said:
Correct, as I said in my opening post, after my initial suspicions were aroused I watched him over a couple of weeks until the hand in question.
I think it would be helpful if different Clubs had their own moderators who might be better equipped to know who is 'straight' and who is not.
#12
Posted 2016-July-10, 13:55
Should people cheat? Of course not.
If you think or strongly suspect someone is cheating and this bothers you, then leave the table at the end of the hand (or team match) and avoid playing with or against the suspected player again.
But don't accuse. You can't tell for sure.
#13
Posted 2016-July-10, 14:55
#14
Posted 2016-July-10, 16:20
"It's quite fun looking at these things.....but I can't see the point of the person that's cheating." says cynac as an observation.
Well...any half-decent bridge player will know when someone is perennially cheating, because they do the unexpected time and time again. That's why Boye Brogeland and his bridge friends were able to identify the world class players who had resorted to cheating. Obviously, at international level, cheating is accompanied by prestige, money prizes and championships won, so there is a 'point' to it all.
On BBO it is usually someone who thinks they are better at the game than they really are - how many players have we all encountered who are deluded enough to call themselves 'Expert' or 'Advanced' but are nothing of the sort - and finally recognise that there's a bit more to this game than meets the eye, so they just resort to cheating as a way of 'justifying' their over-amplified status?
And there's the ones who just get a 'weird kick' out of doing this sort of thing, some sort of power trip, a manipulative control of their fellow players, people in general, and they bring their 'psychosis' to BBO.
Yes, the ones who cheat, and also the ones who overstate their bridge status by a long margin, are just sad, deluded individuals, who should know better, but bring their immaturity here. Let's leave it at that.
#15
Posted 2016-July-10, 20:52
Yes it occurs in high profile matches. The stakes of getting and staying hired are too high. Personally I think cheating online is like a gateway drug. It doesn't matter here, hell it doesn't matter in a club game where we play with a client and we take a little peeky and finish ITM in a regional and we get to jack our fee. Soon we find a partner with the same -ambitions- and we are making the R16.
Yes its pathetic. Yes, people notice and whisper.
To any wannabes; you will get caught. Maybe not right away.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#16
Posted 2016-July-11, 05:51
And doesn't Victor Mollo's 'Oscar the Owl, Senior Kibitzer' spend all his time kibbing? IIRC, he never actually plays bridge!
It's also probably true that the electronic age may have made things even easier for the cheaters. I cannot help but chuckle at Goldfinger's elaborate set-up (in the 1960s movie), for whatever game they are playing. No need for that now!
#17
Posted 2016-July-11, 06:23
661_Pete, on 2016-July-11, 05:51, said:
Psyche (pron. sahy-kee): The human soul, spirit or mind (derived, personification thereof, beloved of Eros, Greek myth).
Masterminding (pron. mstr-mnding) tr. v. - Any bid made by bridge player with which partner disagrees.
"Gentlemen, when the barrage lifts." 9th battalion, King's own Yorkshire light infantry,
2000 years earlier: "morituri te salutant"
"I will be with you, whatever". Blair to Bush, precursor to invasion of Iraq
#18
Posted 2016-July-11, 07:45
661_Pete, on 2016-July-11, 05:51, said:
It has been suggested that a table host be given the choice of allowing human kibitzers but disallowing 'zzz' (anonymous) kibitzers. Now, if someone wanted to kib themselves theyd have to do so from an active account.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#19
Posted 2016-July-11, 13:38
#20
Posted 2016-July-11, 13:50
Psyche (pron. sahy-kee): The human soul, spirit or mind (derived, personification thereof, beloved of Eros, Greek myth).
Masterminding (pron. mstr-mnding) tr. v. - Any bid made by bridge player with which partner disagrees.
"Gentlemen, when the barrage lifts." 9th battalion, King's own Yorkshire light infantry,
2000 years earlier: "morituri te salutant"
"I will be with you, whatever". Blair to Bush, precursor to invasion of Iraq