Which robots
#1
Posted 2020-June-17, 14:54
Additionally, why do the robots bid so badly? I have seen novice bridge players with less than one week experience bid better...
#2
Posted 2020-June-17, 15:57
jcalex2, on 2020-June-17, 14:54, said:
Sunk cost fallacy
#4
Posted 2020-June-18, 04:03
Please provide some examples of so-called "bad bidding". In my experience, GIB is extremely accurate and reasonable.
#8
Posted 2020-June-18, 22:32
jcalex2, on 2020-June-17, 22:02, said:
My interpretation is Hrothgar is saying that BBO has invested a lot of time and money in the robots, and doesn't want to throw that away by replacing them with something else (either starting from scratch or with another product). His statement suggests that future investment required with these robots may be more than if they did start over, and that they are making an incorrect economic assessment in sticking with the current ones.
#9
Posted 2020-June-18, 23:22
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OK, perhaps I am not being clear, let's try again.
How many times do I see commentaries similar to this one on the Forum and elsewhere? You may be interested to know that in a review published by Rahwan et al., in Nature (2019) It was proposed in the title that there is such a thing as "Machine behaviour". Well, I have some bad news for Dr Rahwan and his friends at MIT. They are wrong, there isn't. You can call it Ginsberg Intelligent BridgePlayer or GIB, but it isn't the algorithm that is intelligent it's the human. This fallacy is known as anthropomorphisation: assigning human qualities to non-human things. It is commonly done as a means of satire. I do it frequently on the Forum when I mock my own poor play by ascribing my inadequacies to the incompetence of my friend the North robot (see what I mean ).
The Rahwan review starts with the following sentence.
"In his landmark 1969 book, Sciences of the Artificial Nobel Laureate Herbert Simon wrote: Natural science is knowledge about natural objects and phenomena." Before I continue, pause to understand the use of the words 'landmark' and 'Nobel Laureate' here: The idea behind this kind of writing is How can you argue with me now? After all my argument is backed by a Nobel laureate. The authors then go on to develop the idea that if Humans have a quality that we refer to as 'intelligence' then so do machines.
You might think "well, it's published in Nature, the worlds best scientific Journal, it must be true". Think of the still unretracted paper by Benveniste 1988 showing that water can 'remember' the presence of antibodies. In 2019 alone 14 papers were retracted from another Nature group publication "Scientific Reports" which has an impact factor of more than 4.
All sorts of ridiculous ideas flow from this concept of artificial intelligence: when in fact it is nothing more than a perpetual motion machine. Pit four robots against each other and guess who wins? Nobody - that's right nobody is playing.
In fact, GIB is not artificial intelligence at all. Only people that believe in Santa Claus, the Tooth Fairy, or have not passed the stage of object permanence could think otherwise. Here I am thinking of people that believe that COVID-19 will magically go away if you stop testing, or that your mother vanishes when she leaves the room.
Here is how it really works:
When you play in a robot tournament it is exactly the same as playing IRL (in real life) or FTF (face to face). Except that it is better. There is no possibility of cheating. Your opponents cannot kick each other under the table, blink, wink, fart, move their fingers, or do anything else. Even better, they make a pretty good attempt at describing their bid. They do not arrive at the table and say things like we play Acol. Or we play Myxi 2's or some other stuff. They do not behave like a lesion looking for a space to occupy. They never gloat and they never complain.
The most important thing that people seem to be unaware of - in the Kruger/Dunning sense of the term - is that when you play in a game against robots, the result that you get is not a result that is compared with robots.
You are comparing yourself with actual people. Yes, PEOPLE.
So, next time somebody complains about bad bidding or bad play from the robots remember that what they are really saying is that someone (or more likely several other someones) found a better way to bid and play the same hand. Alternatively, the advanced robots played it differently to the basic robots, or two humans played it differently, but again, is this any different to what happens IRL or FTF? It still has nothing to do with 'intelligence' on the part of the robot.
In order for GIB to be intelligent, it would need to be capable of several things that humans can do that the program cannot. It would need to be able to learn new stuff. It can't. It would need to be able to improvise. It doesn't. It would need to be able to write long whiny aposiopesical posts on the Forum about...
#10
Posted 2020-June-18, 23:32
sfi, on 2020-June-18, 22:32, said:
I think it's the other way around, to be honest. Making changes to GIB appears so complicated that they can't afford to spend any time on it, which is why nobody works on it anymore. And that there probably is a long term plan to switch to Argine, in which case there is no reason at all to spend anything more on GIB.
#11
Posted 2020-June-19, 09:34
pilowsky, on 2020-June-18, 16:51, said:
Not that GIB doesn't make some good calls at times, probably more than some us give it credit for. However, it is poor overall, often making some of the worst calls you'll ever see. BBO sorely needs a new robot, or find a way to fix Gib, which apparently is impossible.
#12
Posted 2020-June-19, 14:58
zhasbeen, on 2020-June-19, 09:34, said:
Try to follow the reasoning presented above. You are not actually competing against the computer. You are competing against another human who is competing against the computer. There are not actually three robots and one human, there is one human - you, and one computer GIB! What is so difficult to understand. It doesn't matter what GIB bids. It only matters what you bid compared to what the other human bids That's why it's called human intelligence! Otherwise, you would use it to heat bread and make toast.
FYI the original 'bug' was an actual moth on the circuit board of a mainframe - how about that. from JCR Licklider and the men who made computing personal.
#13
Posted 2020-June-19, 17:53
Imagine a hypothetical, say the bots had a bug such that every single hand, your robot partner bid 7nt and redoubled. Now, this would be a level contest for everyone, sure, but it wouldn't be very enjoyable, and doesn't resemble at all bridge played by normal humans. Now GIB obviously isn't this bad, and is actually better than the average human on the site, but it is substantially worse than more advanced humans and other bots that haven't been abandoned by their original creators for 18+ years and have been continually improved at a faster rate. The question BBO has to ask is what the ROI is in investing money into licensing a different bot (and altering it to function in their distributed server environment), or increasing resources into GIB. It's not clear, because there's not much competition with other sites, and people generally aren't quitting playing robot tourneys out of disgust. They are cheap, and the robots are "good enough", for most, in that on most hands it generally takes reasonable actions. It's only maybe 1/10 of the time it does something egregious, it's just frustrating because some of the bugs are well known, repetitive, and have been there for years without being addressed. BBO is basically doing the McDonald's model here, cheap, good enough for average customer, no real incentive to improve without significant competition or sales plummeting.
If you want examples of bugs, read through hundreds (thousands?) of bug reports on this forum below, many of which remain unfixed, many for years.
#14
Posted 2020-June-19, 18:47
#15
Posted 2020-June-19, 19:25
It is nothing to do with the computer. If you want to play face to face bridge then just get three other people and off you go. I do this on Stepbridge and other computer platforms. I will not be doing it at the face to face "Club" because it does not cater for all people, and because it is expensive and because I have seen and experienced a large amount of bullying racism antisemitism and misogyny.
As for so-called errors, I have seen the computer make choices that I would prefer it not to make. These choices are never better or worse than choices that a human partner would make based on bids that I have made on the trust-your-partner principle. What many (not all) people do not seem to understand is that the computer only plays one system. (like the terminator) It never deviates. It does not understand irony and if you indicate that you have a certain holding then it will simulate based on that estimation. Sometimes this will result in a contract that humans characterise as "ridiculous" - bad luck - no-ones dying.
#16
Posted 2020-June-19, 20:06
Anyway, we get it. You think the robot plays well, and no one else here agrees.To be perfectly honest, I would rather have a robot as a partner then a random unknown (to me) player. I choose to do neither. I can always watch an opera instead.
#17
Posted 2020-June-19, 20:25
pilowsky, on 2020-June-19, 19:25, said:
Those statements were referring to different concepts. I was saying that we understand your argument, that it is a level playing field and that the competition is against other humans. What I am claiming what you appear not to understand, from your statements, is that a significant number of us would enjoy it a lot more (and perhaps play more often) if the substantial number of bugs in the software were reduced, either by increased investment in bug-fixing development hours, or by moving to another software entirely.
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Wtf nonsense is this? I know who controls the computer. I am under no delusions. I worked as a software engineer for two decades, I know how they operate. The computer executes code based on human composed instructions. Unfortunately, humans are far from perfect, and can provide the computer faulty instructions, and incomplete instructions (i.e. database entries/rules telling how the computer to interpret bids, and rules on how to prioritize choosing particular bids). BBO's software has had minimal development other than fixing some of the most egregious bidding database bugs/gaps for about 18 years. It has fallen significantly behind other competitors in terms of the bot play.
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We understand this. We also understand that software can be improved if the programmers work on it. People have the right to complain about software bugs. You think Microsoft/Google/AWS/every other commercial software operation don't get complaints when stuff doesn't work or doesn't work as well as it could? You think people should just ignore any and all bugs and never ask for fixes, just live with it? Your position is insane IMO.
#18
Posted 2020-June-19, 21:27
#19
Posted 2020-June-19, 22:18
WTF are you talking about, external locus of control? You are making a total nonsense argument.
#20
Posted 2020-June-20, 07:30
pilowsky, on 2020-June-19, 14:58, said:
FYI the original 'bug' was an actual moth on the circuit board of a mainframe - how about that. from JCR Licklider and the men who made computing personal.
"robots and one human, there is one human - you, and one computer GIB! What is so difficult to understand."
Yes, this absolutely true, and I have stated this to someone I know who is interested as recently as yesterday. In my own words:
"We all have same robot partner and 2 robot opponents, while playing the same convention card. We don't have to alert or remember what all the bids mean. All we have to do is run our mouse cursor over any bid in the auction to see what the robots' bids mean, or what the robots expect us to hold for our bids."
I go on to say: "While you are trying to outplay the robots while at the "table", your real opponents are the other humans that held your cards. At the end of the game your scores are match pointed and listed in the results.
It all comes down to playing your cards and making decisions based on the info that's available to you and all the other players."
So, I agree that Gib's antics probably don't have much impact on matchpoint scores. "It's the same for everyone", as the saying goes. However, it can still have a negative impact on the enjoyment that many players would experience otherwise, and sometimes it borders on painful. There is so much else I like about these tournaments, that I and many others put up with Gib. If only BBO would do something about this big elephant in the living room!
And while I'm at it, for the past 2 years I've kept complete results of every ACBL Daylong Individual tournament at matchpoints since January 1, 2019. At the very least I can tell you number of games, average matchpoint score, and how any 2 players have fared relative to each other when in the same field. You are in there!
I also have more detailed info such as masterpoints, power ratings, etc for those who include real name in profile and have average scores ranking in the upper 20%. I include my real name in player profile.
So, with all the being said, you or anyone else who reads this can drop me a private email if your are curious, and I can tell you number of tournaments played, average score, and how your record compares with any other player(s) when you've been in same field. Pilowsky; are you curious?