As much as I share your view, the Turing Test remains a game of deception. Fooling the chatbot with typos is as valid a method as when chatbots use typos to fool the judges, isn’t it? I’m not convinced he did it on purpose though. He was just as bad towards the human confedorates.
I’m inclined to agree with this. Here is an excerpt from Alan Turing’s original paper, ‘Computing Machinery and Intelligence’:
A more specific argument based on ESP might run as follows: “Let us play the imitation game, using as witnesses a man who is good as a telepathic receiver, and a digital computer. The interrogator can ask such questions as “What suit does the card in my right hand belong to?” The man by telepathy or clairvoyance gives the right answer 130 times out of 400 cards. The machine can only guess at random, and perhaps gets 104 right, so the interrogator makes the right identification.”
From this I inferred two things:
1. The father of computer science believed in ESP. Then again, I suppose that there’d been less critical analysis of the ‘evidence’ for parapsychology in his time, such that his belief might be, if not entirely excusable, at least understandable.
2. As far as Turing was concerned, the judge’s job was not simply to hold conversation but to try to discern which of his conversational partners was the human and which was the computer by any means at his disposal within the rules. In his view, even techniques that one might consider ‘cheap’ are nonetheless fair game.
That said, though, I obviously still disagree with this judge’s approach in general, as unlike in a pure Turing test his job was not merely to deduce which of his conversational partners was the bot, but also to judge how human-like the bot is even in the event that it’s clearly recognizable as a chatbot. The Loebner Prize is not a pure Turing test - it is a competition.