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AlphaGo- Whatever You Do Is Wrong
Posted: Wed Jan 11, 2017 1:59 am
by wineandgolover
Hi all,
I've been going through the AlphaGo games and have reached a few conclusions.
1. Most of the games are easier to understand than contemporary pro games, and thus are great choices for amateurs to study.
2. When reviewing these games I often get the feeling that AlphaGo is asking questions of its human opponents. But there seems to be no right answer, and the human gets punished, regardless.
I have chosen two games and made a video to demonstrate these two points. Please let me know your thoughts.
Re: AlphaGo- Whatever You Do Is Wrong
Posted: Wed Jan 11, 2017 9:09 am
by Bill Spight
Love the title.

Re: AlphaGo- Whatever You Do Is Wrong
Posted: Wed Jan 11, 2017 12:45 pm
by dankenzon
Nice comment.
At my (limited) level I also notice that: there's a constant asking and feeling that you need to answer.
The evident superiority in exchanges remind me what is said about Honinbo Shuei, the master of miai: seems that AlphaGo looks for exchanges where it can't loose.
So then you come to ask: may be those questions shouldn't be answered?
Re: AlphaGo- Whatever You Do Is Wrong
Posted: Wed Jan 11, 2017 2:12 pm
by Gomoto
Great video!
Very good advice:
https://youtu.be/6rB2cYOeppQ?t=901
("The way to win a won game is
not to start another fight.")
Just applied it successfull to one of my games.
I often tend to put myself under unnecessary pressure with bad decisions. (Trying to fight for live in my opponents territory, instead of aiming for a relaxed win by increasing my own potential when I am already ahead.)
Re: AlphaGo- Whatever You Do Is Wrong
Posted: Thu Jan 12, 2017 12:05 pm
by Stefany93
I wonder if they made the algorithm public yet?
Re: AlphaGo- Whatever You Do Is Wrong
Posted: Thu Jan 12, 2017 12:21 pm
by Gotraskhalana
One thing that bothers me about the AlphaGo reviews:
So ok, AlphaGo clearly plays better than the pros, and AlphaGo occasionally makes uncommon moves. Now everyone focusses on these uncommon moves and new fuseki and joseki are discussed. But what if AlphaGo's dominance comes from all the other moves, simply adding little advantages at every move? It would be perfectly possible for these uncommon moves to be wrong and refuted in a new version of AlphaGo.
Re: AlphaGo- Whatever You Do Is Wrong
Posted: Thu Jan 12, 2017 1:39 pm
by Stefany93
Gotraskhalana wrote:One thing that bothers me about the AlphaGo reviews:
So ok, AlphaGo clearly plays better than the pros, and AlphaGo occasionally makes uncommon moves. Now everyone focusses on these uncommon moves and new fuseki and joseki are discussed. But what if AlphaGo's dominance comes from all the other moves, simply adding little advantages at every move? It would be perfectly possible for these uncommon moves to be wrong and refuted in a new version of AlphaGo.
Hence why I hate AlphaGo - Go players will turn like chess players or "cyborgs" and will start to play Computer Go, rather than human go.
Re: AlphaGo- Whatever You Do Is Wrong
Posted: Thu Jan 12, 2017 2:49 pm
by oren
Gotraskhalana wrote: Now everyone focusses on these uncommon moves and new fuseki and joseki are discussed
The main reason they talk about the uncommon moves is that pros have historically ignored it. Since a greater than pro level strength plays it, then pros will of course start focusing on the moves that have been ignored.
It's not just fuseki and joseki. AlphaGo analysis also had some interesting midgame points that hit many pros blind spots.
Re: AlphaGo- Whatever You Do Is Wrong
Posted: Thu Jan 12, 2017 3:48 pm
by SpongeBob
Nice video, thanks!
It makes sense: if Alpha Go is stronger than his opponent, he does not need to pick a risky fight and instead of a tactical move he can play a strategic move, which will be easier to understand.
Re: AlphaGo- Whatever You Do Is Wrong
Posted: Thu Jan 12, 2017 3:54 pm
by dankenzon
Stefany93 wrote:I wonder if they made the algorithm public yet?
They won't. Because there's no algorith. AlphaGo is a virtual brain. It learned and developed its own style.
Re: AlphaGo- Whatever You Do Is Wrong
Posted: Thu Jan 12, 2017 3:56 pm
by dankenzon
SpongeBob wrote:Nice video, thanks!
It makes sense: if Alpha Go is stronger than his opponent, he does not need to pick a risky fight and instead of a tactical move he can play a strategic move, which will be easier to understand.
Actually I think it's the other way around: he is so strong because doesn't need to fight, and look for exchanges instead of fights.
Also the lack of Ko fights is something to notice.
Re: AlphaGo- Whatever You Do Is Wrong
Posted: Fri Jan 13, 2017 2:16 am
by Knotwilg
Great videos!
I saw one game, which was discussed by Hay Lee, where the opening seemed equal until Ke Jie made a clear mistake. So in that particular case it didn't seem to be a case of "whatever you do is wrong".
I concur with a few comments:
1) for such an overwhelming dominance, I had expected MORE uncommon moves (more moves and more uncommon). The bot plays surprisingly conventional go to my taste. For example, I would have bet on tengen as the eventual opening move.
2) the greatest advantage it seems to have is its estimation of exchanges (furikawari). I've seen swaps where I thought, this is a huge thing to give away, only to see the size of the sacrifice be reduced from all sides.
3) I find alphago easier to understand as well, but only with the hindsight that it wins everything.
Cheers
Re: AlphaGo- Whatever You Do Is Wrong
Posted: Fri Jan 13, 2017 2:39 am
by Cassandra
Knotwilg wrote:1) for such an overwhelming dominance, I had expected MORE uncommon moves (more moves and more uncommon). The bot plays surprisingly conventional go to my taste. For example, I would have bet on tengen as the eventual opening move.
If your "technical" level is near perfection, you are able to keep it "simple".
Re: AlphaGo- Whatever You Do Is Wrong
Posted: Fri Jan 13, 2017 4:04 am
by Bill Spight
Knotwilg wrote:
I concur with a few comments:
1) for such an overwhelming dominance, I had expected MORE uncommon moves (more moves and more uncommon). The bot plays surprisingly conventional go to my taste.
I think that this reflects its better strategical judgement. AlphaGo's ordinary plays are bigger than they look.
2) the greatest advantage it seems to have is its estimation of exchanges (furikawari).
This is another area where it strikes me that AlphaGo's play is like Go Seigen's.
3) I find alphago easier to understand as well, but only with the hindsight that it wins everything.
This aspect makes me think that the next generation of pros will be rather stronger than today's. This is the kind of thing that kids just pick up without much cogitation. Their intuition will be better.

Re: AlphaGo- Whatever You Do Is Wrong
Posted: Fri Jan 13, 2017 8:46 am
by Knotwilg
Bill Spight wrote:
This is another area where it strikes me that AlphaGo's play is like Go Seigen's.
Isn't it sad the old master fell one year short of living the new new fuseki?