The battle of wits between IBM and chess grandmaster Garry Kasparov is one of the biggest moments in the history of artificial intelligence. After conceding defeat, the Russian suggested that the IBM team had cheated their way to a victory, something that the company, to this day, refutes. A new film, from Nate Silver's FiveThirtyEight,
seeks to shed some light on the accusation and what prompted his
allegations. Directed by Hollywood uber-producer Frank Marshall, the
documentary examines the controversial 44th move and how a simple
computer error proved to be Kasparov's undoing.
According to the film, Deep Blue was trapped in a loop, and rather
than spin its wheels, IBM had programmed the computer to just make a
"safe legal move." Essentially, this means it just made a nothing move
that would force the onus back on Kasparov without losing a piece or
position. The grandmaster, however, had assumed that there was some
deeper logic at work, and was rattled.
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[This is sort of a shortened version of the documentary Game Over.]
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