
Chess has had its fair share of incidents relating to cheating over the years, with the one involving American Grandmaster Hans Niemann in 2022 turning out to be one of the biggest controversies in the history of the sport. More recently, Ukrainian-Romanian Grandmaster Kirill Shevchenko had been slapped with a three-year ban with one year suspended after he was caught using a cell phone in the toilet at a recent event.
However, cheating isn’t something that is exclusive to human nature, at least when it comes to chess. According to Time, a recent study conducted by a group of researchers based in California, USA discovered that some Artificial Intelligence (AI) programs have exhibited signs of cheating in the game.
The study titled “Demonstrating specification gaming in reasoning models” was conducted by Palisade Research, an organisation based in Berkeley, California whose mission is to “study the offensive capabilities of AI systems today to better understand the risk of losing control to AI systems forever”.
The researchers observed the behaviour of several prominent chatbots when pitted against open-source chess engine Stockfish, with the AI program playing with black pieces, and found that while some cheated without prompting, others needed a prompt to cheat. There were also some programs that had absolutely no idea how to cheat.
Content retrieved from: https://www.firstpost.com/sports/chess/artificial-intelligence-ai-chess-cheating-stockfish-palisade-research-13876476.html.