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Apple Hardware Leader John Ternus to Succeed CEO Tim Cook The Web Is Gaslighting AI Agents and Nobody Can Tell OCC Enters the Interchange Fight and Raises the Stakes Amazon Dismisses New Evidence in California Antitrust Suit AI Finds Its Best Customer on Main Street Coinbase Opens Services Marketplace for Agentic Commerce Feds Start Processing $127 Billion in Tariff Refunds for Importers Payments Modernization Is Insurance’s Next Big Margin Engine How Visa Is Rewiring Bank Infrastructure for the AI Era Instant Payments Grow but the Real Barrier Is Human The Old-School Card Product Banks May Need Most 43% of SMBs Would Pay to Make Purchases in Installments The Real AI Edge in Payments Comes From Better Judgment In the Age of Agentic AI, Data Control Is Power Verizon’s Dan Schulman Tells CEOs to Be Open About AI Job Cuts Walmart Eyes Stores as Warehouse Space for Same-Day Delivery France’s CB Payments Network Aims to Take on Visa/Mastercard in EU QVC Was TikTok Shop Before TikTok Shop Loop Raises $95 Million to Bridge Supply Chain Data Gap Cursor Eyes $50 Billion Valuation as AI Coding Demand Surges Commercial Lending Rescues Regional Banks From Consumer Slowdown Anthropic and White House Aim to Make Peace in Friday Meeting Home Depot Buys SIMPL Automation to Support Same-Day Delivery The Riskiest Words in B2B: This Is How We’ve Always Done It France Urges Euro Stablecoins to Break Dollar Dependency Importers Prep for Monday Opening of Tariff Refund Portal Permitting Hurdles and Labor Shortages Threaten AI Data Center Timelines Token Freezes Force CFOs to Rethink Stablecoin Risk X Money Tests Whether Social Commerce Can Hold Consumer Deposits Anthropic Briefs EU Regulators on Mythos Cybersecurity Concerns Welcome to Vibe Ordering, ChatGPT Is Taking Your Order Now Nvidia Says AI Can Finally Make Quantum Computing Work QVC Files Chapter 11 to Slash Debt and Pursue Growth Uber Eats Lets Customers Return Their Retail Purchases Financial Officials Sound Alarm About Anthropic’s Banking Risk 71% of Billion-Dollar Firms Face Agent Identity Threats OpenAI Targets Pharma Giants With Purpose-Built AI Model California Claims Amazon Punishes Sellers for Lower Prices on Other Sites CFTC Chairman Says AI Helps Agency Run More Like a Business Global Finance Chiefs Call for Mythos Information Sharing Big Bank Earnings Show Digital Activity Drives Deposits OCC Clears JPMorgan Chase After Trade Surveillance Program Upgrade Accounts Receivable Gets an AI Upgrade BNY’s AI Strategy Signals a New Era of Platform Banking Bank of England Probes AI Threats to UK Financial Stability Rising AI Adoption Is Driving Up Enterprise Costs Google Faces EU Order to Share Search Data With Rivals Delivery Robots Lead Grab’s AI Expansion Circle Chief Says China Could Issue Stablecoin in 3 to 5 Years Amex Acquires Hyper to Boost AI and Expense Management Offerings Anthropic Ready to Offer Mythos to British Banks Issuers Face a New Reality as Credit Goes Real Time How Payments Gaps Are Limiting Deposit Growth at Community Banks AI May Run Payments but Humans Still Own the Risk 90% of Millennials Feel Pressure at the Grocery Store The New Checkout Is Where the Best Offer Wins Apple Pushes Siri Programmers to Adopt AI Coding Tools Amazon Sellers Protest Policy Changes With One-Day Ad Boycott FanDuel and DraftKings Fund $41 Million Lobbying Effort by Super PAC Live Nation Loses Antitrust Case Brought by 33 States Fed Beige Book Finds Tax Refund Relief Running Into Higher Gas Prices Anthropic’s New Design Tool Rivals Adobe and Figma Goldman Sachs Seeks SEC Approval for New Bitcoin ETF What AI-Driven Attack Chains Mean for CFOs and CISOs Healthcare’s AI Boom Moves From Bedside to Back Office Accel Prepares to Pour $5 Billion Into Global AI Breakouts Nearly 4 in 10 Financially Stressed Shoppers Choose Walmart Over Amazon Synchrony Bets on Teachers to Fix Financial Literacy Mastercard’s Mark Barnett Says the Real Currency for SMBs Is Payment Timing SoFi Uses Galileo to Power Real-Time FedNow Transfers Palo Alto Founder Eyes Liberty Bank for AI Banking Experiment Surcharge Surge Hits Consumers as Fee Fatigue Sets In Walmart CFO Says Marketplace Revenue Up 20% Over 2025
Chess Learns to Live With Its Robot Overlords
PYMNTS · 2026-05-09 · via PYMNTS.com

Let us begin by tipping a small, respectful, slightly terrified king to the International Chess Federation, which has managed to connect three things that reliably make people feel inadequate: chess, artificial intelligence and education.

At FIDE’s “Chess & AI in Education” Congress in Menorca, Spain, in April, the message was not that robots are coming for the classroom with a rook lift and a lesson plan. It was that AI is turning chess into a test lab for how people learn, think, teach, compete and occasionally accuse one another of consulting a silicon oracle in the bathroom.

Chess has always been catnip for technologists because it looks so clean. There are 64 squares and six kinds of pieces. A child can learn the rules and fail to master them throughout their lifetime. That made it an ideal proving ground for early AI, from Claude Shannon’s 1950 paper on programming a computer to play chess to IBM’s Deep Blue, which beat Garry Kasparov in 1997 and gave the world one of its first mainstream “the machine has arrived” moments.

The answer to the obvious Weekender question is brutal but clarifying. No, a human can no longer really compete with top AI at chess. Not in the pure “sit down and win a match” sense. Today’s engines do not get tired, do not tilt, do not fall in love, do not overthink lunch and do not make a speculative sacrifice because they once saw Mikhail Tal do something beautiful on YouTube. Stockfish, the open-source chess engine used by grandmasters and chess platforms, is trusted at the top levels of the game and regularly updated by a global developer community.

But that is where the story gets better. AI did not kill chess. It turned every laptop into a grandmaster’s laboratory and every teenager with Wi-Fi into a student of inhuman excellence. The machine became less of an opponent and more of a brutally honest tutor, the kind that tells you your brilliant idea was actually a blunder in 17 moves.

The milestone reel starts with Alan Turing and David Champernowne’s Turochamp, created in the late 1940s, which could not run on the machines of its day but could be executed by hand, very slowly, like a Victorian chatbot wearing a waistcoat. Then came Shannon’s formal framing of computer chess in 1950. Deep Blue’s 1997 victory over Kasparov turned the idea into front-page drama. In 2017, DeepMind’s AlphaZero pushed the story into a new phase by learning chess through self-play and then playing in a style that many humans found unnervingly creative. DeepMind later described AlphaZero as willing to sacrifice material early for long-term gains, which is also how many media companies describe their podcast strategies.

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The wildest uses of AI in chess are no longer just about crushing humans. Some systems are designed to understand them. Maia, a human-like neural network chess project, flips the normal engine logic. Instead of asking for the best move, it asks what a human at a given skill level is likely to play. It treats mistakes not as garbage but as data. In educational terms, that is the difference between a teacher who only circles the wrong answer and one who understands how the student got there.

FIDE’s Menorca gathering leaned hard into that idea. Speakers discussed personalized learning, real-time feedback, coach training and AI as a support tool rather than a substitute teacher. FIDE Secretary of Education Commission Rita Atkins warned against the overuse and misunderstanding of AI, saying teachers should remain the main instrument in the classroom while introducing AI slowly as a tool. The congress also highlighted special education, adaptive chess interfaces and Chess2Mind, a platform using voice interaction, lower cognitive load and accessibility tools for people with speech or physical limitations.

The congress also included a neuroscience case in which a patient played chess verbally during awake brain surgery, without seeing the board, so doctors could monitor memory, concentration and decision-making in real time. That is not merely thinking three moves ahead. That is thinking three moves ahead while someone is literally checking the wiring.

AI has also made chess more paranoid. Online platforms now need sophisticated fair-play systems because an engine can sit invisibly beside a player like a tiny criminal grandmaster. According to Chess.com, its cheat detection system has been developed for more than a decade and looks at more than 100 gameplay factors, using statistical algorithms to detect extremely improbable performances. The result is a strange new arms race. AI improves chess, AI tempts cheaters and AI helps catch them.

The future of AI and chess, then, is not man versus machine. That match ended. The machine won, took the trophy, analyzed the trophy and suggested a more efficient trophy. The future is human plus machine, as in smarter training, more accessible classrooms, better pattern recognition, more inclusive play, and perhaps a generation of students who learn strategy through a board game that doubles as a thinking simulator.

So here is the final position. Chess survived AI because chess was never only about finding the best move. It was about learning why the move works, why the obvious move fails, and why humans keep sitting down across from one another even after the computer has solved their afternoon. The robots may own the scoreboard, but the humans still own the handshake, the trash talk, the comeback and the ancient pleasure of saying, with complete confidence and only partial accuracy, “I meant to do that.”

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