Trinidad, on 2012-November-10, 16:44, said:
Of course it is enforceable. We just ask the player at what point he realized that he gave the wrong explanation.
We have conflicting ideas about what unenforceable means.
Trinidad, on 2012-November-10, 16:44, said:
If a player knowingly breaks the rules in this way, we use the c-word. We do not adjust scores, we do not give PP's. We throw the player out of the bridge club.
No, you wouldn't, because there's no way to prove it. If the only way of proving this infraction is having the player admit to it, and we're going to toss the player if he does so, then is he going to admit it? Assuming your name isn't Jack Bauer.
Trinidad, on 2012-November-10, 16:44, said:
And let's get real. You are talking about a player who was asked for an explanation. At that point he gave the explanation that he sincerely thought was correct (though in fact it was wrong). A little later, this same, sincere player figures out that he gave the wrong explanation. And what does he decide to do? He decides to cheat and not correct the information.
I see what you did there. You used "sincere" in two different senses, the first being "in truth" and the second being "honest." It doesn't follow that someone who "sincerely" forgets his agreement is necessarily a sincere person who wouldn't try to recover at a later point.
Trinidad, on 2012-November-10, 16:44, said:
Now, if one wanted to cheat, what would be easier: simply give the wrong explanation from the start? or give -what you think is- the correct information and -once you realize it is incorrect- not correcting it?
First of all, these are not two choices for a player in the same situation. These are two different situations: the player ostensibly remembers his agreement in the first and doesn't remember in the second.
Also, purposefully giving the MI throughout would have little to gain in relation to giving the correct explanation throughout when the TD adjusts. Failing to correct MI already given has plenty to gain in relation to not correcting it.
blackshoe, on 2012-November-10, 18:06, said:
The laws are as they are. If your point is that they should be something other than they are, you're in the wrong forum. If your point is that a few people will cheat and never get caught, I don't believe it. If your point is that "everybody" cheats or would cheat if they got the chance, I think you're entirely too paranoid. IME most people are honest, and most people at least try to play by the rules.
In this forum, we rule according to the laws as they currently are, and we do not assume that "everyone" or anyone is a cheat.
First, one matter of law I'm still disputing is that a repeat of the MI in response to a question is not an infraction. I don't see how this is justified. If we're ruling that way just to avoid Silly Town, then the same argument would justify saying 40B4 or 21B3 or something allows us to adjust at the point the NOS used the MI.
Second, I am not accusing anyone in particular of cheating. I'm not making a ruling on the assumption that someone is cheating. I am saying that there is a scenario in which someone could cheat (knowingly breach 20F4) and easily get away with it. Is there a problem with accusing a hypothetical cheater of hypothetically cheating in a hypothetical scenario? I am asserting that there are players who would take advantage in this situation. I am also saying that the Laws, in general, provide rectification even if a player could have knowingly gained through an irregularity, and this would be an exception, because an irregularity either has not actually occurred or because there's no way of proving there was one.
That there is such a situation, combined with the other weird consequences, is evidence that we're interpreting the law incorrectly to begin with. (And yes, if that interpretation is indeed correct, then blah blah other forum.)