I haven't much knowledge of the other thread , but it just happened that this situation occured when I was worldbuilding to the principle of going back to go forward. The thought was that in a couple of decades, serious online tournaments may occur in 'Rooms of Profound Darkness' (the name of the nihon-kiin's online sever!) inspired by anechoic chambers (these would be an-EM), perhaps preceded now by proctors. An online game would be treated as two simultaneous boards; simply speaking, an issue on the device of one would often result in a win and a draw (0.5 and 1 maybe added together for a 1/3 and 2/3 result).
On the note of this being the first run, I still feel you'd maybe want as many issues and altercations to occur in earlier events as possible; so if there are any problems that could occur, it would be great if they do so in the first two and brilliant if in run number one. So this is perhaps best interpreted as positive development; our tendencies to argue mean if go was more developed and we hadn't practiced this ruleset it could've been quite catastrophic. Counter fire with water and the like, always, and never with fire unless your burning soil and hay so wildfires can't spread in the future.
You might assume that in the first run of an online tournament, issues would occur that were not anticipated. This could mean that rulings would lean towards generalisation; if a witness was there for one job but it was discovered that they could do well for another, the rule can be generalised. It seems rather harsh on the organisers and volunteers to have exacting job descriptions on the very first run of a tournament they've never tried before. . . Is it not best to treat this as an experimental trial considering the circumstances? Or weight the reputation of the individuals more (this couldn't have been the worst choice of person for this to happen to

)? (But it makes sense; considering how quickly the EGF could be critised even after working hard to organise this tournament for us, they probably subconsciously leaned towards easing responsibility away from themselves; hopefully it has not backfired. Helpful ideas beat critique, everyone). However, it is odd that of all things,
lag was not anticipated for, so this is an unexpected expected and according to science this is then categorised as funny; so it won't likely happen again! And again, their missing something simple likely came from focusing so much on delivering this for us. . . So thank you to them, may they welcome this pain

.