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The official scoring for the first match was 184 out of the 361 possible points in favor of Ke Jie, but the Chinese Go rule requires a Black victory of at least 4 over the 180.5 (i.e., 184.5 is the minimum for a Black victory). Ke Jie resigned in the second game after 156 moves and the third game after 209 moves.
AlphaGo versus Ke Jie was a three-game Go match between the computer Go program AlphaGo Master and current world No. 1 ranking player Ke Jie, being part of the Future of Go Summit in Wuzhen, China, played on 23, 25, and 27 May 2017. [1]
[47] [48] Master won all three games against Ke Jie, [49] [50] after which AlphaGo was awarded professional 9-dan by the Chinese Weiqi Association. [11] After winning its three-game match against Ke Jie, the top-rated world Go player, AlphaGo retired. DeepMind also disbanded the team that worked on the game to focus on AI research in other ...
After winning its three-game match against Chinese grandmaster Ke Jie, the world's top Go player, AlphaGo was awarded professional 9-dan by Chinese Weiqi Association. [10] DeepMind announced that AlphaGo would retire, and DeepMind would disband the team that worked on Go and spend their time exploring new AI in other areas instead of Go.
In May 2017, AlphaGo beat Ke Jie, who at the time was ranked top in the world, [29] [30] in a three-game match during the Future of Go Summit. [31] In October 2017, DeepMind revealed a new version of AlphaGo, trained only through self play, that had surpassed all previous versions, beating the Ke Jie version in 89 out of 100 games. [32]
Ke Jie informed the referee that he did not oppose the penalty but requested that the game be resumed immediately and paused only after Byun had made his move. However, the referee dismissed the request, which, from Ke Jie's perspective, made it seem as if the referee was extending the pause time to give Byun additional time and his actions ...
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Live video of the games and associated commentary was broadcast in Korean, Chinese, Japanese, and English. Korean-language coverage was made available through Baduk TV. [65] Chinese-language coverage of game 1 with commentary by 9-dan players Gu Li and Ke Jie was provided by Tencent and LeTV respectively, reaching about 60 million viewers. [66]