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After his partner has objected, the player trying to concede knows that partner intends to win trick(s) that conceder did not expect him to win. The text of the Law does not explicitly refer to this information, but only labels information arising from the conceder's exposed cards as UI.
Law 16A1c states that information arising from legal procedures may be used. Objecting a concession is a legal procedure. So I would think that it is not UI to know that partner expects to win some trick(s).
Furthermore, even if I would believe the knowledge was UI, I wonder what a player is expected to do in possession of such UI. Shall he play a suit where it is most unlikely for his partner to win a trick, even if partner has signalled for some other suit?
The question arose from the following example:
4 Tricks played (Click "Next"). Now West displays all his remaining ♥ cards without saying anything. East objects.
When play continues, we can expect West to win his 4 ♥ tricks first. Discarding on this, East can easily signal for ♠. Should West really be required to shift to ♣ when he runs out of ♥, actively ignoring partners signal?
This was discussed in the German bridge mailing list "Doubl". Some of the contributors really believed that the information about East's objection is UI for West, and one of them cited Ton Kooijman ("Commentary to the 2007 edition of the Laws of Duplicate Bridge"):
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In my view, this comment in contradiction to the Law. What do you think?
Karl