Posted by point_piper on 9/13/2012 5:22:00 PM (view original):
Collusion contains fraud and secrecy. Where are those in either of these cases?
Whatifsports' definition leaves out secrecy:
Collusive transactions
Collusion includes any act that supports bad, deceitful or illegal behavior agreed upon by two or more users.
I can't see how either of the examples above are acts which support bad, deceitful, or illegal behavior. Who is being deceived?
In the case of the recruiting, it would seem to fit whatif's definition of collusion only if the PAC-12 coaches went ahead and tried to deceive Utah (or whomever) by actually agreeing on a strategy against Utah and implementing it with regard to specific recruits. Chatting openly about how each coach's recuiting practices affect Utah and the conference as a whole does not approach that level of conduct.
In the case of the scheduling, I don't see any problem with it even if they go ahead and carry out the strategy. There is just nothing deceitful, bad, or illegal about it; it's not "collusion" according to a dictionary, a legal dictionary, or whatifsports.com's fair play guidelines.
here's the real problem - WIS does not use the dictionary definition of collusion, neither do the users, and neither do we (or WIS) use WIS's own definition of collusion.
this is how i see it, and the actions/reactions by WIS, and statements by admin/seble very much support this view:
WIS's listed definition -
Collusion includes any act that supports bad, deceitful or illegal behavior agreed upon by two or more users.
WIS's real definition -
Collusion includes any act that supports bad, deceitful or illegal behavior agreed upon by two or more users, AS WELL AS ANY ACTION OR SUGGESTION BY A USER THAT ATTEMPTS (INTENTIONALLY OR OTHERWISE) TO INCITE SUCH BEHAVIOR.
its basically like how in the american legal system, its wrong to shoot somebody in the face. but if you pull a gun, shoot at their face, and miss - you still did something wrong. its not as bad, because the end result was not as bad. but the possibility of the end result, based on your actions, was there.
there is a school of philosophy that suggests that the outcome of actions has no bearing on the morality of such actions, and there is a lot of sense in it. if you try to shoot someone in the face, is it really less of a crime because you missed? your intention was there, and not knowing the outcome of your action, you can still judge if that action was just or unjust, and to what magnitude.
so, by your interpretation here - if one coach sitemails another coach, and tries to get him to collude against another coach in the worst of ways - coordinating to poach recruits off the same coach in the final cycle - and the second coach says no - i think everyone here agrees that is collusion (or at least, cheating, or at absolute least, wrong, and should not be allowed). would you agree? that said, the definition listed by WIS does NOT imply such behavior is collusion OR cheating OR prohibited. however, all actions by WIS/CS suggest the opposite.
so, the reality is, their definition is not good. seemingly, they use the definition i listed - which is basically their definition, plus any attempt by a user to achieve such behavior is also collusion. under that definition, the pac 10 example falls into collusive behavior, and that is why people have a problem with it.