All good things here.
An important concept I am trying to impart here is this:
Do not help guide players in the gray area or finer details. Keep it simple for them.
Metaphor:
Bribery is a mine-field.
We post a barrier well outside the mine-field telling players, Danger, do not enter!
When a player indicates to you they wish to enter the mine-field anyhow, it is NOT your role to help them.
It is your role to tell them not to enter. It is dangerous to enter. There is no good reason to enter. Stay on this side of the barrier.
Explain the clear and easy of prize splitting
“You can agree to a prize split before any mention of match result occurs.
When a match has ended and you have received your prizes, they are yours.”
Caution them
“Should you do anything to raise a suspicion that one agreement was contingent upon the other; I could conclude you are committing bribery and DQ you.
If you are thinking, but judge, I want you to guide me on how can I get my opponent to concede to me by offering a prize split; then I will be DQing you if you don’t change your thinking.
We need to stop seeing our role is to help players to navigate the nuances so they can cheat properly.
We need to see our role is to exemplify a higher standard, but only penalize if they break the rules.
Andy
From: Joaquín Ossandón
Sent: Thursday, March 12, 2015 7:56 PM
To: Heckt, Andy
Subject: Re: UC - Bribery and Collusion, splitting and conceeding into top8 (Competitive REL)
I agree with Andy, we should not encourage this kind of situations. But the problem is that players want to do legal things, and want to maximize their prize, so we are most likely gonna find ourselves in such predicaments, and even if we instruct them to be far away from the line, we not to be able to define which is the line in order to do our job.
Honestly, I had an interpretation on this until this summer (winter in the north xD), and after an article that I won't comment (do not talk about investigations), the subsequent discussion, and the “wink post”, I think I improved my understanding on the issue.
Before, I thought the problem was linguistic. If they say one before, and the other after, then is not bribery; backwards, it was. Nowadays I think that's a pretty cynical approach, and we can (and should) be able to analyze the situation better. What we are looking for is an intention to exchange something for a concession:
The decision to drop, concede, or agree to an intentional draw cannot be made in exchange for or influenced by the offer of any reward or incentive. Making such an offer is prohibited. Unless the player receiving such an offer calls for a judge immediately, both players will be penalized in the same manner.
Players are allowed to share prizes they have not yet received in the current tournament as they wish and may agree as such before or during their match, as long as any such sharing does not occur in exchange for any game or match result or the dropping of a player from the tournament.
Some interesting things to point out:
“in exchange for an influenced by the offer of any reward or incentive”
Note that this involves not only the presence of the reward or incentive, but the offer of such.
as long as any such sharing does not occur in exchange for any game or match result
“In exchange”, in my opinion, invokes an offer or an agreement (which is why I think that a wink could provoke a DQ)
So, I don't think both of the elements (concession and split) being close to each other are enough for a bribery. There need to be an offer (implicit or explicit) and/or an exchange in order to be bribery. If two players agree to split (50-50) before even discussing anything, and then one of them says “hey, if you concede to me I will get to the top 8, and you can't. That would mean more boosters for you (as they had splitted 50-50) than if you win” both things (concession and split) are present, the concession was caused by an incentive (the will to gain more boosters), but there WASN'T an offer involved. Note that I do think that players trying to use linguistic games in order to legally exchange a concession for a split are in bribery territory, even if they don't technically say it, like: “you know, if you concede to me I could, without obligation, share part of my prizes with you (wink, wink)”.
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