sanst, on 2020-May-14, 01:34, said:
This is exactly why I don’t like online bridge and don’t consider it fit for a serious match or tournament. It’s fine for training and for quite a lot of players for amusement, but that’s it. Just to mention another problem: at Stepbridge, the official Dutch online bridge club, you have to alert and explain yourself, just like playing with screens. But there’s no review afterwards, so it’s hard for the opponents to discover that there was a wrong explanation. You also have to inform the opponents when you make a call that’s not discussed, what you think, expect or hope that your partner will make of it.
Actually, I don’t think there’s much to do for the WBFLC. It’s impossible to prevent cheating, so don’t treat it as a serious game.
I think the EBU was much better balanced in what it said about online bridge
here.
It seems to me ludicrous to exclude online bridge as a serious alternative when it was already clearly destined to ultimately supplant face to face bridge even before the current pandemic and now for a significant period of time constitutes the only and increasingly credible form of competitive bridge.
Online bridge in screened physical venues has been identified for many years now as the best chance to reduce cheating in high level bridge.
Online bridge at club level is working well enough on BBO right now and I see no particular reason to assume that there is more cheating than in clubs.
There is certainly a heck of a lot less UI flying around and that can only benefit ethical players and the game in general.
The lack of a review period after the hand is a serious problem of BBO that has been highlighted here by some of us, if more protest then BBO may take action.
It is just one example of the things that should be regulated by WBFLC, who cannot sit and fiddle while Rome burns.