April 8, 2007
Chess
As Technology Leaps Ahead, Concerns About Cheating Grow
By DYLAN LOEB McCLAIN

Concerns about cheating, and ideas about how to stop it, have become a preoccupation of the chess world in recent months.

While cheating is not new — for years, some Soviet players were suspected of colluding at international tournaments — more attention is being paid now because of recent incidents and because of the increasing sophistication of computers and communication devices.

In July, two players at the World Open in Philadelphia fell under suspicion. One, Steve Rosenberg, who was winning his section, was found with a wireless receiver in his ear. He was expelled and subsequently banned from tournaments by the United States Chess Federation for three years.

The other, Eugene Varshavsky, a low-ranked player, was searched thoroughly before each game after he beat a strong grandmaster by playing 25 consecutive moves that matched those suggested by a computer program. (Efforts to locate Varshavsky, or to find a phone number where he could be reached for comment, were unsuccessful; people in the chess world say they have not seen him recently.)

At the world championship in October, Veselin Topalov of Bulgaria insinuated that Vladimir Kramnik of Russia might have consulted a computer during frequent bathroom trips. The bathrooms were locked and the match was suspended. Subsequently, the bathrooms were reopened and the match resumed, and no proof of wrongdoing was found.

Here is the full article. Special thanks to NY Chess Mom for pointing this article out to me.

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