A semigroup $S$ is _moving_ if $S$ is infinite, and for all finite 
$F\subseteq S$ and infinite $A\subseteq S$, there are $a_{1},\dots,a_{k}\in A$ such that,
for all but finitely many $s\in S$,
$$
\{a_{1}s,\dots,a_{k}s\} \nsubseteq F.
$$
The following implications hold among the properties listed below:
$$
(1)\Rightarrow(2)\Rightarrow(4)\Rightarrow(5);
(1)\Rightarrow(3)\Rightarrow(5).
$$
(1) $S$ is a group.

(2) $S$ is _left cancellative_: for all $a,b,c\in S$, if $ca=cb$ then $a=b$.

(3) $S$ is _right cancellative_: for all $a,b,c\in S$, if $ac=bc$
then $a=b$.

(4) Left multiplication in $S$ is finite-to-one: for all $a\in S$, the function $x\mapsto ax$ is finite-to-one.

(5) $S$ is moving.


**Question.**
Let $S$ be a smigroup such that _right multiplication_ in $S$
is finite-to-one (that is, for all $a\in S$, the function $x\mapsto xa$ is finite-to-one).
Is $S$ necessarily moving?

**Remarks:** Moving semigroups are interesting since a genrealization of Hindman's Finite Sums coloring theorem applies to them. This is so because a semigroup $S$ is moving if and only if the Stone-Cech remainder $\beta S\setminus S$ is a subsemigroup of $\beta S$.

**Theorem.** Let $S$ be a moving semigroup. 
For each coloring of the elements of $S$ in finitely many colors,
there are distinct elements $a_{1},a_{2},\dots\in S$
such that all products $a_{i_1}a_{i_2}\cdots a_{i_n}$ with $i_1<i_2<\cdots<i_n$ ($n$ arbitrary) have the same color.