Bridge trolls
#1
Posted 2014-August-20, 18:28
#2
Posted 2014-August-20, 19:02
tclayjr4u, on 2014-August-20, 18:28, said:
Hi, and welcome to the forums.
It's not very clear what you are complaining about. That some people play worse than others? Do you believe there are some people who have no idea what bridge is and click randomly on the screen just to annoy others? I doubt that is the case.
If you have a suggestion please be more clear about what exactly bothers you and what the solution might be.
#3
Posted 2014-August-20, 20:02
First and foremost BBO is a software provider/facilitator, not a police force.
Although it does provide a police force, the players themselves take on the lead role in that function:
A private club can deny membership
A tournament host can deny membership/entry to tournament either as player or kibitzer or both
A table host outside of tournaments can deny entry to the table either as player or kibitzer or both.
A BBO member can flag an individual as enemy.
A BBO member can also compile a list of friends and gravitate to tables of known friends and players (at least outside tournaments, and tournaments tend to exercise positive anti-troll measures)
Responsibility for controlling each of the above rests not with BBO but with an individual member, be it private club management, tournament host, table host or player.
If none of those measures are sufficient you can report the member to abuse@bridgebase.com
You will not be notified of the outcome, and this can lead to frustration but should not be confused with inaction.
So, without naming names, you need to be more specific.
Psyche (pron. sahy-kee): The human soul, spirit or mind (derived, personification thereof, beloved of Eros, Greek myth).
Masterminding (pron. mstr-mnding) tr. v. - Any bid made by bridge player with which partner disagrees.
"Gentlemen, when the barrage lifts." 9th battalion, King's own Yorkshire light infantry,
2000 years earlier: "morituri te salutant"
"I will be with you, whatever". Blair to Bush, precursor to invasion of Iraq
#4
Posted 2014-August-20, 21:36
I reported him to abuse, and subsequent to my complaint this guy played another 548 hands for +7140 IMPs. On 200 of those hands, his partner was a variation of his own name. It sucks that he's screwing up scores for everyone else who plays the same boards. He stopped playing for 7 days, so maybe there was a suspension, but now he's baaaaack...
#5
Posted 2014-August-21, 01:34
In some respects I am glad that he is back under his original name (not that I know it, but would be glad if I did). It does not stop him screwing up the game, but at least he is visible. I don't see that a permanent ban would help; he would just return under a new ID, and we would be in the same position except that we would need to identify him again.
I am curious what events he is playing in, and is the tourney host unaware? Presumably not an ACBL or EBU event (or any non-free event).
One advantage of forcing him to use a new ID each time might be that his MP ranking would be stripped from him. That said, I would hope that abuse would strip him of accumulated MPs as part of a suspension, so that would remove the incentive to start up anew. In any case, if he has any MPs, they would have to be paid for, so perhaps his real ID is known to BBO.
Ultimately the only way to curb him would be to eliminate anonymity. While it may be inevitable that a few of these individuals will persist in an anonymous environment, without ever wholly eradicating that problem, as a cure I would rate loss of anonymity worse than the disease.
Partial anonymity may be a workable solution? Suppose a member had to deposit a dollar with BBO by a credit card as a condition of membership, but that identity would be visible only to BBO upper management and then only made use of in the event of a disciplinary matter, and still remained private in the event of conviction and used only to prevent a further $1 deposit from the same card holder. Still not a perfect solution, but maybe perfection is beyond reach.
Psyche (pron. sahy-kee): The human soul, spirit or mind (derived, personification thereof, beloved of Eros, Greek myth).
Masterminding (pron. mstr-mnding) tr. v. - Any bid made by bridge player with which partner disagrees.
"Gentlemen, when the barrage lifts." 9th battalion, King's own Yorkshire light infantry,
2000 years earlier: "morituri te salutant"
"I will be with you, whatever". Blair to Bush, precursor to invasion of Iraq
#6
Posted 2014-August-21, 05:35
#8
Posted 2014-August-21, 09:39
Zelandakh, on 2014-August-21, 07:35, said:
That sounds like it, since the OP said they "come in and bid anything no matter how ridiculous".
This is an acknowledged, age-old problem. We don't prevent it, but that's not the same thing as doing "everything imagineable to aid and assist" them. We just don't have any effective way to stop it. It's the nature of the Internet.
If we charged for play in the MBC, it would probably mostly go away. That cure would be worse than the disease.
#9
Posted 2014-August-21, 10:03
diana_eva, on 2014-August-21, 05:35, said:
When 5 consecutive hands have 5 different players sitting West, you have to wonder how much is the fault of the table hoppers
#10
Posted 2014-August-21, 10:36
Bbradley62, on 2014-August-21, 10:03, said:
if East is the habitual 7NTXXer, those table hoppers are his innocent victims. They use HMFAG, it sends them to his lair, he makes a crazy bid, they leave. Rinse and repeat.
If someone bothers to report him, our abuse people will investigate and ban him. Then he'll just create a new account and start up again. We can and sometimes do block based on IP, but there are easy ways around this, like using public hotspots.
#11
Posted 2014-August-21, 12:59
barmar, on 2014-August-21, 10:36, said:
If someone bothers to report him, our abuse people will investigate and ban him. Then he'll just create a new account and start up again. We can and sometimes do block based on IP, but there are easy ways around this, like using public hotspots.
I was thinking more along the lines that East may have been unpleasant to various Wests.
#12
Posted 2016-February-09, 13:32
#13
Posted 2016-February-09, 14:03
johnschoeb, on 2016-February-09, 13:32, said:
"cow try" = "country"?
We could require them to post these things, but how would we force them to be correct?
#14
Posted 2016-February-11, 05:51
My only other bridge activity is at the local U3A group. I don't know how many people are familiar with U3A (= "University of the Third Age") nor whether equivalents exist outside the UK, it's a charitable organisation for retired people, very friendly and informal, who get together in small groups for various self-organised activities at minimal cost. 'Small' groups maybe, the bridge group is very popular, we regularly have some 15 tables playing! We do Chicago and match-points duplicate.
As you will have guessed, most of the participants are pretty 'senior' (we had one star member who'd just celebrated her 101st birthday - sadly she has since passed away, but others there are in their 90s) - and of course politeness goes without saying . So I've asked one or two people there, have you tried BBO? Some of the answers are, "yes, but people are SO rude over there". I've tried to reassure them that it's not all like that: I'm quite a fan of BBO, it's helped me a lot to get back into the game after a gap of many years.
This suggests that there's a perception of bullying, rudeness and trolling, on BBO, which is largely imaginary. Sure, I've got a few people on my blacklist. But these are the exceptions, not the rule.
What more can I say?
Table-hoppers. Yes, some folks may not appreciate that this is rude. It's something I refrain from doing myself. One way to find out if you're up against a rogue partner, is: use "List Open Tables" instead of HMFAG, and when you see an attractive seat, join that table as a kibitzer first. That way, by looking through the past records, you'll see if there's been a quick succession of people occupying the seat you're about to take - which might indicate a problem partner.
Another benefit in taking a seat from being a kibitzer, is that the hand has to be re-dealt. A way of avoiding coming in and having to play out a part-played hand, which I dislike intensely.
The downside is that this all takes time, and in the meantime someone else might grab your seat. If there's a way of working around that, I'd like to know.
#15
Posted 2016-February-11, 11:13
oryctolagi, on 2016-February-11, 05:51, said:
I don't think that happens much any more. Last year we implemented a feature where a robot fills in to finish the hand if someone leaves in the middle of a hand, instead of someone using HMFAG.
#16
Posted 2016-February-11, 12:47
barmar, on 2016-February-11, 11:13, said:
Well, it's happened to me several times. When I join a table straight from the List Open Tables view. And I've come in as declarer or defender too - not just as dummy. I know I won't get credited (or debited) with the outcome of the hand, but it's rather hard on the other players who didn't flounce.
If it's an opponent who suddenly appears as a substitute, mid-hand, I try to help them out by explaining what's been played so far (assuming I can remember). Should I be doing that?
#17
Posted 2016-May-19, 10:07
oryctolagi, on 2016-February-11, 05:51, said:
My only other bridge activity is at the local U3A group. I don't know how many people are familiar with U3A (= "University of the Third Age") nor whether equivalents exist outside the UK, it's a charitable organisation for retired people, very friendly and informal, who get together in small groups for various self-organised activities at minimal cost. 'Small' groups maybe, the bridge group is very popular, we regularly have some 15 tables playing! We do Chicago and match-points duplicate.
As you will have guessed, most of the participants are pretty 'senior' (we had one star member who'd just celebrated her 101st birthday - sadly she has since passed away, but others there are in their 90s) - and of course politeness goes without saying . So I've asked one or two people there, have you tried BBO? Some of the answers are, "yes, but people are SO rude over there". I've tried to reassure them that it's not all like that: I'm quite a fan of BBO, it's helped me a lot to get back into the game after a gap of many years.
This suggests that there's a perception of bullying, rudeness and trolling, on BBO, which is largely imaginary. Sure, I've got a few people on my blacklist. But these are the exceptions, not the rule.
What more can I say?
Table-hoppers. Yes, some folks may not appreciate that this is rude. It's something I refrain from doing myself. One way to find out if you're up against a rogue partner, is: use "List Open Tables" instead of HMFAG, and when you see an attractive seat, join that table as a kibitzer first. That way, by looking through the past records, you'll see if there's been a quick succession of people occupying the seat you're about to take - which might indicate a problem partner.
Another benefit in taking a seat from being a kibitzer, is that the hand has to be re-dealt. A way of avoiding coming in and having to play out a part-played hand, which I dislike intensely.
The downside is that this all takes time, and in the meantime someone else might grab your seat. If there's a way of working around that, I'd like to know.
The things are in this way:when you are kib at table you see the four hands and what play is made so you can have an idea for yourself and can watch commenting listed via table by players about hand and how is played. There is also the possibility to enter at table when a player leave it (usually beginning talking "it is my last, tkx all..") if you click on position free (i.e "South") yet if appears "..not allowed seat..".(Lovera)