@Raptor-5 said in #25:
@UnderwaterDillDough said in #21
It's like knowingly tracking dirt into Mr. X's house. Cheaters are trespassers and should face the consequences.
It's not an accurate analogy. The infrastructure of a chess site for global use is very different than one house. Look at chess clubs also compared to online chess play. You go to the club and you meet 20 players. You get to know them. If any of them are one trick ponies, you have a modicum of research to stop them winning. Compare that with online play where you not only have millions upon millions of players, but you also have engine bots. There is no way to just figure out the antidote.
I am not trying to make a case for cheating/sandbagging, but I am stating you won't learn by doing the same thing over and over and over and over again. Carlsen didn't do it all on his own either.
Your dirt analogy is a good one because it shows the same shallow viewpoint towards an online course vs. Carlsen winning the championship against Anand. Your analogy misses the true comparison that yes when you train, you "cheat". You actually learn the moves. When you play Anand to win the championship, you don't have the shoes to drag in dirt. You are held at a VIP different status.
YOU DON'T CHEAT, YOU DON'T HAVE THE OPTION, YOU ARE SCRUTINIZED TO THE FULLEST.
Try an analogy which includes those scanner devices chess.com promoted at the Candidates and Sinquefield Cup used. You guys just sound like those basement/bedroom guitar players who want to make it sound like you are in an "awesome" band. Face it, you are NOT legend in your room playing chess all day. You don't need to treat things at the same standard because you have grandiose visions being a pretend GM in your undies.
YOU SUCK AT CHESS. BLAMING OTHERS FOR CHEATING JUST MAKES YOU FEEL BETTER IN THE END.
I suggest if you really don't want cheating for not wanting cheating, go back to the local chess part of my reply here. Work with 20 or some people YOU KNOW, then figure out their strengths and weaknesses. Then, meet 20 others.
The way it is now, it is all anonymously paired up. It's silly and stupid to expect a site to police those games as strongly as important tournament events.
In a sense, they're designed to shape the order in which things should go within their territory/platform, so to speak. Please, hear me when I say "their" platform.
One, I never stated people shouldn't be punished. Second, when you have a server where people come together to play, you should allow friends to play friends. If enemies accuse your friends of cheating and convince the server to remove your friends without PROOF, then your friends can't come to play here. I think it would be better to limit the accused if need be to just friends playing friends. Weigh the results of the accused less, and we can ALL get along.
However, when you have a mini-dictator saying "He must have been cheating, I will remove him." NO you aren't helping the community. The "My house my rules" mentality just invites cheaters to come back anonymously under another account. How does that help the thing that was supposed to be stopped. If you contain the accused to friends, then they won't be making new anonymous accounts.
There are those who have supposedly cheated only once and never again. However, this does not change the fact that they knowingly trespassed and should be banned as such.
That is your assumption, you are dictating a stupid rule. I don't see how that helps the cause, nor do I see why people think that way. You bumped into me while standing in line at the market, THEREFORE you must LEAVE!!! You don't get to shop here anymore.
That mentality makes you a mini-dictator.
...Welcome to the Internet, bud... Not everyone is interested in or has time to discuss about their gameplay after each game... Speaking for myself, I've certainly never felt the need to do that and I don't think it makes me a bad sportsman. As long as one plays fairly, nothing else should be expected from one.
Yes, welcome to the internet, where you can play incognito. You can play anonymously. Your method of genociding the smallest of crimes doesn't achieve what you you want.
@Raptor-5 said in #25:
> @UnderwaterDillDough said in #21
> It's like knowingly tracking dirt into Mr. X's house. Cheaters are trespassers and should face the consequences.
It's not an accurate analogy. The infrastructure of a chess site for global use is very different than one house. Look at chess clubs also compared to online chess play. You go to the club and you meet 20 players. You get to know them. If any of them are one trick ponies, you have a modicum of research to stop them winning. Compare that with online play where you not only have millions upon millions of players, but you also have engine bots. There is no way to just figure out the antidote.
I am not trying to make a case for cheating/sandbagging, but I am stating you won't learn by doing the same thing over and over and over and over again. Carlsen didn't do it all on his own either.
Your dirt analogy is a good one because it shows the same shallow viewpoint towards an online course vs. Carlsen winning the championship against Anand. Your analogy misses the true comparison that yes when you train, you "cheat". You actually learn the moves. When you play Anand to win the championship, you don't have the shoes to drag in dirt. You are held at a VIP different status.
YOU DON'T CHEAT, YOU DON'T HAVE THE OPTION, YOU ARE SCRUTINIZED TO THE FULLEST.
Try an analogy which includes those scanner devices chess.com promoted at the Candidates and Sinquefield Cup used. You guys just sound like those basement/bedroom guitar players who want to make it sound like you are in an "awesome" band. Face it, you are NOT legend in your room playing chess all day. You don't need to treat things at the same standard because you have grandiose visions being a pretend GM in your undies.
YOU SUCK AT CHESS. BLAMING OTHERS FOR CHEATING JUST MAKES YOU FEEL BETTER IN THE END.
I suggest if you really don't want cheating for not wanting cheating, go back to the local chess part of my reply here. Work with 20 or some people YOU KNOW, then figure out their strengths and weaknesses. Then, meet 20 others.
The way it is now, it is all anonymously paired up. It's silly and stupid to expect a site to police those games as strongly as important tournament events.
> In a sense, they're designed to shape the order in which things should go within their territory/platform, so to speak. Please, hear me when I say "their" platform.
One, I never stated people shouldn't be punished. Second, when you have a server where people come together to play, you should allow friends to play friends. If enemies accuse your friends of cheating and convince the server to remove your friends without PROOF, then your friends can't come to play here. I think it would be better to limit the accused if need be to just friends playing friends. Weigh the results of the accused less, and we can ALL get along.
However, when you have a mini-dictator saying "He must have been cheating, I will remove him." NO you aren't helping the community. The "My house my rules" mentality just invites cheaters to come back anonymously under another account. How does that help the thing that was supposed to be stopped. If you contain the accused to friends, then they won't be making new anonymous accounts.
> There are those who have supposedly cheated only once and never again. However, this does not change the fact that they knowingly trespassed and should be banned as such.
That is your assumption, you are dictating a stupid rule. I don't see how that helps the cause, nor do I see why people think that way. You bumped into me while standing in line at the market, THEREFORE you must LEAVE!!! You don't get to shop here anymore.
That mentality makes you a mini-dictator.
> ...Welcome to the Internet, bud... Not everyone is interested in or has time to discuss about their gameplay after each game... Speaking for myself, I've certainly never felt the need to do that and I don't think it makes me a bad sportsman. As long as one plays fairly, nothing else should be expected from one.
Yes, welcome to the internet, where you can play incognito. You can play anonymously. Your method of genociding the smallest of crimes doesn't achieve what you you want.