Many chess fans constantly ask me about the issue of computer cheating and possible penalties. I answer that question and many others in my monthly ChessCafe.com article.

What do you think about the cheating problem and what should be done about it?

I think this has become a serious problem, which includes real computer-assisted cheating in amateur events and the false accusation of cheating against professionals. Anyone can be accused cheating; for instance, I was once accused of using a computer to cheat against a 1700 player and even world champions such as Kramnik and Topalov have been accused.

I believe that there should be severe penalties for both cheaters and those who make baseless accusations. A reasonable penalty is a one year ban from chess for the first offense, a three year ban for a second offense and a lifetime ban for a third offense. In fact, Reuters just recently reported that the Indian Chess Federation banned a player for ten years for computer-assisted cheating.

My full article on chesscafe.com this month is here.
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Chess Daily News from Susan Polgar
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