Monedas38218
Capitalización$ 2.26T+1.13%
Volumen Spot 24h$ 19.79B-26.6%
DominanciaBTC56.59%+0.60%ETH9.78%+0.04%
Gas ETH0.06 Gwei
Cryptorank
/

ESPN Tests AI That Can Detect When Someone Is Bluffing


ESPN Tests AI That Can Detect When Someone Is Bluffing

Compartir:

AI Vista

An AI poker-tells detector built over six months by Luke Geel debuted on ESPN’s WSOP Main Event broadcast, using blink rate, eye gaze, posture and chip handling to flag likely bluffs; final-table coverage airs the first week of August and the tool was applied only to players already eliminated. Players are split between calling it cheating and wanting it for self-analysis, raising privacy and security concerns as similar computer-vision systems and AI agents that trade crypto move into high-stakes settings, potentially affecting adoption, regulation and risk management across crypto, DeFi, CEX and DEX services.

Bajista

Mercados de predicciones

Vea en qué se centran los traders

Ver análisis →
Prediction Banner

In Brief

  • An AI that reads poker tells debuted on ESPN's WSOP Main Event broadcast.
  • Luke Geel's model tracks blink rate, posture, and chip handling to flag bluffs.
  • Players are split, with some calling it cheating and others wanting self-analysis.

An artificial intelligence (AI) poker-tells detector debuted during ESPN’s coverage of the World Series of Poker (WSOP) Main Event. The system flags likely bluffs using body language alone.

Independent AI engineer Luke Geel spent six months building the tool. Omaha Productions, the Peyton Manning-owned company behind the broadcast, applies it only to players who have already been eliminated.

How the AI Reads Poker Tells

The computer vision system tracks blink rate, eye gaze, posture, and how players handle their chips. It compares those patterns with results from earlier hands to estimate whether someone holds a strong hand.

Poker hand strength. Source: LinkedIn

Geel, who also develops AI for the US Air Force, announced the debut on LinkedIn. He described the project as harder than expected.

“It was significantly more difficult than I had initially hoped. I can’t just, like, upload a YouTube URL and say, ‘find their tells.'”

Geel said in an interview with Sportico.

Final table coverage airs on ESPN during the first week of August. The debut caps a busy month of AI headlines, days after Musk and Altman clashed over Apple’s lawsuit against OpenAI, as the global AI model race intensifies.

Players Split Between Cheating Claims and Curiosity

Reaction ran hot on Instagram and other platforms. Several players called the feature cheating and bad for the game, while others said they would run it on their own footage to remove personal tells.

Skeptics also question its purpose, since broadcasts already show every player’s hole cards. Meanwhile, Geel said multiple players asked about using the model to study future opponents.

The same approach could eventually read negotiators, job candidates, or sales prospects. That prospect revives earlier warnings about the dark side of AI, even as systems that let AI agents trade crypto enter other high-stakes settings.

Whether audiences treat the feature as insight or intrusion may decide if it returns next season.

Read the article at BeInCrypto
Leer el artículo en BeInCrypto

En esta nota

Criptomonedas


Mercados de predicciones

Vea en qué se centran los traders

Ver análisis →
Prediction Banner

Compartir:

En esta nota

Criptomonedas


Mercados de predicciones

Vea en qué se centran los traders

Ver análisis →
Prediction Banner

Compartir:

Leer más

China’s Kimi K3 Hits US Stock Markets. Is the American AI Boom Over?

China’s Kimi K3 Hits US Stock Markets. Is the American AI Boom Over?

In Brief China just released Kimi K3, a free-to-run AI model rivaling America's best...
TSMC Raised Its 2026 Revenue Guidance: What It Means for AI Chip Demand

TSMC Raised Its 2026 Revenue Guidance: What It Means for AI Chip Demand

In Brief TSMC lifted its full-year 2026 revenue growth guide to above 40%. Capital s...