Encrypted bidding
#21
Posted 2018-June-11, 19:07
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#22
Posted 2018-June-11, 20:50
pescetom, on 2018-June-10, 15:32, said:
It makes little difference, cheating is cheating.
But what you refer to is not encrypted bidding.
Encrypted bidding is based on a key which partner has access to by looking at his own hand. An example would be
2♣-2♠
3♠-4♣
Suppose you have the agreement that the 2♠ bid shows two of the three top honours while that 3♠ bid confirms the 3rd top honour. Now both partners know each other's honour holding in spades so they can agree that the 4♣ opening can have three different meanings, depending on which of the honours is held by opener. This means that both partners will know what the 4♣ bid means but opps don't.
This is not cheating. It is just a convention which may or may not be allowed, depending on local regulations.
#23
Posted 2018-June-12, 04:01
#24
Posted 2018-June-12, 04:18
Specifically 16A2 says you may use the traits of the opponents in this, so if you play against Steve you are allowed to use all the obfuscation you can muster, where you may play straight with others.
#25
Posted 2018-June-12, 05:42
- Is the failure to ban encrypted bidding an oversight? Or because it is seen as less disruptive? Or because in practice nobody uses encrypted calls?
- It seems to me quite easy to design encrypted carding methods, which will be useful and easy to operate. I quickly thought of "defender with majority of the defensive high-card strength gives attitude, defender with minority of the defensive high-card strength gives count" (may or may not be effective but ...). It seems less easy to design encrypted bidding methods that are useful but do not disrupt the requirement to find the correct strain and level. I can't imagine such a method working in a competitive auction, or a part-score auction and possibly not in a game level auction. Maybe this is the reason that the EBU doesn't bother to regulate?
#26
Posted 2018-June-12, 07:01
Tramticket, on 2018-June-12, 05:42, said:
- Is the failure to ban encrypted bidding an oversight? Or because it is seen as less disruptive? Or because in practice nobody uses encrypted calls?
- It seems to me quite easy to design encrypted carding methods, which will be useful and easy to operate. I quickly thought of "defender with majority of the defensive high-card strength gives attitude, defender with minority of the defensive high-card strength gives count" (may or may not be effective but ...). It seems less easy to design encrypted bidding methods that are useful but do not disrupt the requirement to find the correct strain and level. I can't imagine such a method working in a competitive auction, or a part-score auction and possibly not in a game level auction. Maybe this is the reason that the EBU doesn't bother to regulate?
I suspect that you are correct and that encrypted bidding is more of an interesting though exercise then something that can be applied practically
#27
Posted 2018-June-12, 09:05
steve2005, on 2018-June-11, 14:54, said:
Then it is just an extra thing for declarer to think about so they might make a mistake on carding or elsewhere. This does not seem to be any advantage from a bridge standpoint. Method is trying to gain an advantage just by confusing or outright deceiving if opps didn't ask. I have never asked opponents are you playing encrypted signals.
I think I've heard that Meckwell play reverse suit-preference signals simply because it's unusual and declarer will have to think about it more deliberately. There's clearly no technical reason why it's better than ordinary suit preference, so psychology seems to be the only possibility.
#28
Posted 2018-June-12, 09:16
hrothgar, on 2018-June-10, 12:35, said:
However an agreement that a 5♣ would show
- 0/3 Key cards if Opener holds the King of Trump
- 1/4 Keycards if opener does not hold the ing of Trump
is encrypted
helene_t, on 2018-June-11, 20:50, said:
2♣-2♠
3♠-4♣
Suppose you have the agreement that the 2♠ bid shows two of the three top honours while that 3♠ bid confirms the 3rd top honour. Now both partners know each other's honour holding in spades so they can agree that the 4♣ opening can have three different meanings, depending on which of the honours is held by opener. This means that both partners will know what the 4♣ bid means but opps don't.
Consider the auction
1N-4♣(15-17 BAL; asking for aces)
4♦-5♣(0 or 4 aces; asking for kings)
5♦(0 or 4 kings).
After 4♦ it's clear to both Opener and Responder, but not necessarily to any opponent, how many aces Opener has. And since a 15-17 NT must contain at least an ace or a king, 5♦ can equivalently be described as showing
* 0 kings if Opener has 4 aces
* 4 kings if Opener has 0 aces
So is 5♦ encrypted?
Btw, an example similar to Helene's is
4♠-4N (PRE; RKC(♠))
5♦-5N (1 key card; confirming all key cards).
Here e.g. 6♣ could be given five different meanings depending which key card Opener has.
#29
Posted 2018-June-12, 17:24
Tramticket, on 2018-June-12, 05:42, said:
IMHO there are two reasons why encrypted bidding is usually not explicitly banned (although some specific encrypted methods may be banned due to other regulations).
1) There's no compelling reason to ban them, any more than there's a reason to ban Rusinoff leads or strong club systems. Most encrypted methods are slam conventions (the two-way king ask replies being a typical example), so it's not like they are particularly disruptive.
2) System regulations create legal havoc since it is difficult to define exactly which methods would fall under the regulation. A ban on methods that are explicitly called "encrypted" would just lead to pairs disclosing their methods in different ways. OTOH, a ban on anything that is encrypted in the broad sense that it relies on partner's holding as a (secret) key, would ban lots of vanilla methods. For example:
(1♥)-1♠-(2♥)-pass
(pass)-X
In some styles, opps can be assumed to be in exactly in an 8-card fit as both would have an obligation to bid 3 if they had known of a 9-card fit. Hence, this double is a so-called Polish double: "Penalty or take-out, you will see in your own hand which it is".
Basically, the default position should be that everything is allowed. Only disallow methods that are genuinely harmful to the game AND can be defined sufficiently clearly that a ban is meaningful, easy to communicate and won't affect non-harmfull conventions.
#30
Posted 2018-June-13, 03:52
Tramticket, on 2018-June-12, 05:42, said:
I think it all hinges on law 16A1d. "A player may use information in the auction or play if it is information that the player possessed before he took his hand from the board and the laws do not preclude his use of this information". This information already known is the name of partner's dog. No law I see precludes using this information.
Therefore it can easily be used in free bidding. If the name of the dog is Lucy, you play weak NT, otherwise strong NT. Or 1♣ is either a strong unspecified type bid or a transfer walsh 1♣, and a 1♥ reply is either controls or shows spades, etc. It must be very difficult to compete against this.
Used in competition, you can say that an overcall is either natural or the suit higher (encrypted), and this would certainly throw my bidding off if they did it against me.
What is the point of this clause (d)? This is the one law that deals with unauthorised information, and it is saying that the name of the dog is legal information.
#31
Posted 2018-June-13, 05:46
fromageGB, on 2018-June-13, 03:52, said:
Therefore it can easily be used in free bidding. If the name of the dog is Lucy, you play weak NT, otherwise strong NT. Or 1♣ is either a strong unspecified type bid or a transfer walsh 1♣, and a 1♥ reply is either controls or shows spades, etc. It must be very difficult to compete against this.
Used in competition, you can say that an overcall is either natural or the suit higher (encrypted), and this would certainly throw my bidding off if they did it against me.
What is the point of this clause (d)? This is the one law that deals with unauthorised information, and it is saying that the name of the dog is legal information.
You might be able to get away with that, however, given that this this is now a matter of agreement, the other side can compel you to disclose the name of the dog which kind renders the whole plan moot
5.(a) When explaining the significance of
partner’s call or play in reply to an
opponent’s enquiry (see Law 20) a player
shall disclose all special information
conveyed to him through partnership
agreement or partnership experience but
he need not disclose inferences drawn from
his knowledge and experience of matters
generally known to bridge players.
#32
Posted 2018-June-13, 06:27
fromageGB, on 2018-June-13, 03:52, said:
Therefore it can easily be used in free bidding. If the name of the dog is Lucy, you play weak NT, otherwise strong NT. Or 1♣ is either a strong unspecified type bid or a transfer walsh 1♣, and a 1♥ reply is either controls or shows spades, etc. It must be very difficult to compete against this.
Used in competition, you can say that an overcall is either natural or the suit higher (encrypted), and this would certainly throw my bidding off if they did it against me.
What is the point of this clause (d)? This is the one law that deals with unauthorised information, and it is saying that the name of the dog is legal information.
Yes, that information is authorized and the laws require you to make such information and how it affects your calls etc. known to your opponents as part your partnership understandings.
#33
Posted 2018-June-13, 09:00
fromageGB, on 2018-June-13, 03:52, said:
I think the purpose of that clause is to prohibit having discussion about agreements after drawing your hand from the board. It's not saying that non-bridge information is legal because you knew it beforehand, it's just specifying the distinction between before taking your cards from the board and after.
E.g. you take your cards out, notice you have a 2♣ opener, and realize that you never discussed what response methods you're using. It's too late now.
#34
Posted 2018-June-13, 10:26
fromageGB, on 2018-June-13, 03:52, said:
Does the name of this dog change randomly over time? No? Then I don't see the point. There's no "encryption" here.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#36
Posted 2018-June-13, 13:42
pran, on 2018-June-13, 12:20, said:
How, in a bridge sense, does "we play weak NT here" differ from "we play weak NT here because partner's dog's name is Lucy"?
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#37
Posted 2018-June-13, 14:34
blackshoe, on 2018-June-13, 13:42, said:
I don't know and I don't care.
But if the dog's name (or whatever extraneous information) has any impact at all on the partnership understanding the effect must be fully disclosed (in advance).
#38
Posted 2018-June-13, 18:38
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#39
Posted 2018-June-14, 09:18
pran, on 2018-June-13, 14:34, said:
But if the dog's name (or whatever extraneous information) has any impact at all on the partnership understanding the effect must be fully disclosed (in advance).
I think the question is whether the effect must be disclosed, or does the name of the dog has to be disclosed?
Playing Devil's Advocate: Clause (d) says that you can base your actions on information you had before taking cards from the board. Where does it say you have to give that information to the opponents? You're only required to disclose agreements. The name of the dog isn't an agreement, it's just a fact about the world. The agreement is only "If partner's dog is named Lucy, we play weak NT."
#40
Posted 2018-June-14, 09:28
barmar, on 2018-June-14, 09:18, said:
Playing Devil's Advocate: Clause (d) says that you can base your actions on information you had before taking cards from the board. Where does it say you have to give that information to the opponents? You're only required to disclose agreements. The name of the dog isn't an agreement, it's just a fact about the world. The agreement is only "If partner's dog is named Lucy, we play weak NT."
Posting once again for Barry, who doesn't bother to read threads
5.(a) When explaining the significance of
partner’s call or play in reply to an
opponent’s enquiry (see Law 20) a player
shall disclose all special information
conveyed to him through partnership
agreement or partnership experience but
he need not disclose inferences drawn from
his knowledge and experience of matters
generally known to bridge players.