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| Tags: board, crime, imposters, old |
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#1
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The ICGA will be sorry for that crime of banning LIST the program of Fritz
Reul. LIST doesn't use bitboards as I am told so how could it be a Crafty clone at all?? Dann Corbit had seen the source of a former version and he judged all as completely different to CRAFTY. Ulli Tuerke (COMET) say that the two progs are totally different in their behaviour. These imposters should imediately retire after this tournament. People like Bruce Moreland and other younger characters should lead the union of computerchess. Fritz Reul has his examins in mathematics this week so it is a crime to disturb him at his home. Disgusting these imbeciles. Rolf |
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#2
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Then did not Fritz Reul just comply with the ICGA, it did not seem as if
they were asking to much. He had more than enough time to at lest relpy. "Rolf Tueschen" wrote in message ... The ICGA will be sorry for that crime of banning LIST the program of Fritz Reul. LIST doesn't use bitboards as I am told so how could it be a Crafty clone at all?? Dann Corbit had seen the source of a former version and he judged all as completely different to CRAFTY. Ulli Tuerke (COMET) say that the two progs are totally different in their behaviour. These imposters should imediately retire after this tournament. People like Bruce Moreland and other younger characters should lead the union of computerchess. Fritz Reul has his examins in mathematics this week so it is a crime to disturb him at his home. Disgusting these imbeciles. Rolf |
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#3
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Lastly I am sure that he had a least 10 - 15 minutes to repond in some way
to this matter even with his exams. The fact that he did not means that he did not care enough about it. So why should he cry now. I am sure that he has no time to reply now given his exams and all so we will have to wait until he has time to answer the charges. Given that I see no reason that the WCCC should have to wait on his exams to be completed just to finish their event. "Rolf Tueschen" wrote in message ... The ICGA will be sorry for that crime of banning LIST the program of Fritz Reul. LIST doesn't use bitboards as I am told so how could it be a Crafty clone at all?? Dann Corbit had seen the source of a former version and he judged all as completely different to CRAFTY. Ulli Tuerke (COMET) say that the two progs are totally different in their behaviour. These imposters should imediately retire after this tournament. People like Bruce Moreland and other younger characters should lead the union of computerchess. Fritz Reul has his examins in mathematics this week so it is a crime to disturb him at his home. Disgusting these imbeciles. Rolf |
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#4
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#5
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What I find interesting is the following quote at
http://chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsid=1330 : "The program List is suspected to be a clone of the program Crafty. Autor Fritz Reul failed to prove otherwise and allowed a final deadline to pass." So apparently an author's reputation and integrity can be maligned on "suspicion." What is truly tragic is the "assumed guilty" posture of the accused. LIST was *SUSPECTED* to be a clone, and was disqualified because the author *FAILED TO PROVE* otherwise. How incredibly unjust. Furthermore, it does not appear that the ICGA followed thier own rule: "Each program must be the original work of the entering developers. Programming teams whose code is derived from or including game-playing code written by others must name all other authors, or the source of such code, in their application details. PROGRAMS WHICH ARE DISCOVERED TO BE CLOSE DERIVATIVES OF OTHERS (e.g., by playing nearly all moves the same), may be declared invalid by the Tournament Director after seeking expert advice. For this purpose a listing of all game-related code running on the system must be available on demand to the Tournament Director." LIST was ONLY SUSPECTED of being a clone; it was NOT DISCOVERED TO BE A CLONE. The rule, as written, places the BURDEN on the ICGA to prove it is a close derivate of another before disqualification; it does not place the burden on the accused to prove that it is not a derivative. Thus, the rule is inapplicable to the present situation. The ICGA needs a procedure to follow in resolving these disputes. Apparently it has none, so it made a procedure up at the expense of an author's reputation. Furthermore, the ICGA has now possibly damaged the author's reputation beyond repair. Allegations of copyright infringement are serious concerns in the software community. Finally, the ICGA should have accommodated the accused author's schedule - is it too much to ask to give a person a small reprieve while he tends to examinations rather than publicly call into question the author's integrity in a worldwide publication on the Internet. A public retraction is in order, and an apology. |
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#6
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since you defend the programmer, then you don't think his 'reputation is
damaged beyond repair" either or you wouldn't bother trying to do just that. cut the bull****. "Znarf" wrote in message t... What I find interesting is the following quote at http://chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsid=1330 : "The program List is suspected to be a clone of the program Crafty. Autor Fritz Reul failed to prove otherwise and allowed a final deadline to pass." So apparently an author's reputation and integrity can be maligned on "suspicion." What is truly tragic is the "assumed guilty" posture of the accused. LIST was *SUSPECTED* to be a clone, and was disqualified because the author *FAILED TO PROVE* otherwise. How incredibly unjust. Furthermore, it does not appear that the ICGA followed thier own rule: "Each program must be the original work of the entering developers. Programming teams whose code is derived from or including game-playing code written by others must name all other authors, or the source of such code, in their application details. PROGRAMS WHICH ARE DISCOVERED TO BE CLOSE DERIVATIVES OF OTHERS (e.g., by playing nearly all moves the same), may be declared invalid by the Tournament Director after seeking expert advice. For this purpose a listing of all game-related code running on the system must be available on demand to the Tournament Director." LIST was ONLY SUSPECTED of being a clone; it was NOT DISCOVERED TO BE A CLONE. The rule, as written, places the BURDEN on the ICGA to prove it is a close derivate of another before disqualification; it does not place the burden on the accused to prove that it is not a derivative. Thus, the rule is inapplicable to the present situation. The ICGA needs a procedure to follow in resolving these disputes. Apparently it has none, so it made a procedure up at the expense of an author's reputation. Furthermore, the ICGA has now possibly damaged the author's reputation beyond repair. Allegations of copyright infringement are serious concerns in the software community. Finally, the ICGA should have accommodated the accused author's schedule - is it too much to ask to give a person a small reprieve while he tends to examinations rather than publicly call into question the author's integrity in a worldwide publication on the Internet. A public retraction is in order, and an apology. |
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#7
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"Rolf Tueschen" wrote in message
... The ICGA will be sorry for that crime of banning LIST the program of Fritz Reul. LIST doesn't use bitboards as I am told so how could it be a Crafty clone at all?? Dann Corbit had seen the source of a former version and he judged all as completely different to CRAFTY. Ulli Tuerke (COMET) say that the two progs are totally different in their behaviour. These imposters should imediately retire after this tournament. People like Bruce Moreland and other younger characters should lead the union of computerchess. Fritz Reul has his examins in mathematics this week so it is a crime to disturb him at his home. Disgusting these imbeciles. Rolf You're making the same mistake as the ICGA board - namely using rumors and here-say to reach conclusions. If you read David Levy's letter once more you'd perhaps understand that List wasn't banned for being a clone - rather it was banned because the author failed to provide the source code so the board could react to its own suspicion and a formal complaint. This is a very crucial point in this case. Normally a person is innocent until otherwise proven and the burden of proof is on the prosecutor. However, for the ICGA board to lift the burden of proof it needs to look at the code, thus it's fair and just to ban a member for not providing the code on request. The fact that Reul is attending exams is really not important - after all, Reul made the decision to participate in the tournament while knowing he would have exams at the same time. I can imagine a minor inconvenience for him to have to send his source code while attending exams - but his part of this entire investigation should take no longer than half an hour or less. Therefore, when you say "Fritz Reul has his examins in mathematics this week so it is a crime to disturb him at his home" you're really way out of line. If we are to learn something from this ordeal I would say that ICGA should ask for source code for every attending program before the tournament begins, e.g. in a sealed envelope. If any complaints or suspicions arise the board would have immediate access to the code without having to be in the awkward situation of having to get hold of the programmer first. Timely reaction to such complaints/suspicions is crucial for the tournament's integrity, for computer chess in general and for all authors of original source code. /UL |
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#8
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What about programs playing nearly all moves the same? Is it impossible
for programs that playing the same variant of opening with very open and mutually terminating continuation where almost each move has decisive meaning and ends up with a draw. If programs refuse to fail in each move, there should be a suspicion that they are clones of perfect engine. Concerning List, what if to make List to play with several versions of Crafty from some test set of positions and see the difference with Crafty playing against itself from the same positions? I think that the most secret place of the chess engine is its evaluation function. The rest of the code uses almost the same algorithms, so this shouldn't be the secret. The demands for the source code of the chess engines should be limited to the subset of source code that does not include evaluation (which should be replaced with dummy code). After investigation of this less secret code it can be compiled and binary compared with the real executable image. They must be different only in some service information and the part that corresponds to evaluation function. After that if program does not have violations in the presented source code and plays different game of the suspected parent program, it MUSTN'T be treated as a clone. Also if evaluation binary machine code can be extracted from the suspected parent program, it can be compared against suspected clone evaluation binary code. "Znarf" wrote in message t... What I find interesting is the following quote at http://chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsid=1330 : "The program List is suspected to be a clone of the program Crafty. Autor Fritz Reul failed to prove otherwise and allowed a final deadline to pass." So apparently an author's reputation and integrity can be maligned on "suspicion." What is truly tragic is the "assumed guilty" posture of the accused. LIST was *SUSPECTED* to be a clone, and was disqualified because the author *FAILED TO PROVE* otherwise. How incredibly unjust. Furthermore, it does not appear that the ICGA followed thier own rule: "Each program must be the original work of the entering developers. Programming teams whose code is derived from or including game-playing code written by others must name all other authors, or the source of such code, in their application details. PROGRAMS WHICH ARE DISCOVERED TO BE CLOSE DERIVATIVES OF OTHERS (e.g., by playing nearly all moves the same), may be declared invalid by the Tournament Director after seeking expert advice. For this purpose a listing of all game-related code running on the system must be available on demand to the Tournament Director." LIST was ONLY SUSPECTED of being a clone; it was NOT DISCOVERED TO BE A CLONE. The rule, as written, places the BURDEN on the ICGA to prove it is a close derivate of another before disqualification; it does not place the burden on the accused to prove that it is not a derivative. Thus, the rule is inapplicable to the present situation. The ICGA needs a procedure to follow in resolving these disputes. Apparently it has none, so it made a procedure up at the expense of an author's reputation. Furthermore, the ICGA has now possibly damaged the author's reputation beyond repair. Allegations of copyright infringement are serious concerns in the software community. Finally, the ICGA should have accommodated the accused author's schedule - is it too much to ask to give a person a small reprieve while he tends to examinations rather than publicly call into question the author's integrity in a worldwide publication on the Internet. A public retraction is in order, and an apology. |
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#9
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"Alexander Belov" wrote in message ... What about programs playing nearly all moves the same? Is it impossible for programs that playing the same variant of opening with very open and mutually terminating continuation where almost each move has decisive meaning and ends up with a draw. If programs refuse to fail in each move, there should be a suspicion that they are clones of perfect engine. Concerning List, what if to make List to play with several versions of Crafty from some test set of positions and see the difference with Crafty playing against itself from the same positions? I think that the most secret place of the chess engine is its evaluation function. The rest of the code uses almost the same algorithms, so this shouldn't be the secret. The demands for the source code of the chess engines should be limited to the subset of source code that does not include evaluation (which should be replaced with dummy code). After investigation of this less secret code it can be compiled and binary compared with the real executable image. They must be different only in some service information and the part that corresponds to evaluation function. After that if program does not have violations in the presented source code and plays different game of the suspected parent program, it MUSTN'T be treated as a clone. Also if evaluation binary machine code can be extracted from the suspected parent program, it can be compared against suspected clone evaluation binary code. As a clear addition, the source code have to be compiled with the same version of compiler and its settings as a binary from tournament. Comparison of evaluation code is possible under the same condition for both programs. |
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#10
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Rolf Tueschen wrote:
The ICGA will be sorry for that crime of banning LIST the program of Fritz Reul. LIST doesn't use bitboards as I am told so how could it be a Crafty clone at all?? The allegation is that substantial portions of the code came from Crafty. There's much more to Crafty than its bitboard-based move generation routines. Dann Corbit had seen the source of a former version and he judged all as completely different to CRAFTY. Ulli Tuerke (COMET) say that the two progs are totally different in their behaviour. It doesn't matter how different they are in behaviour. For example, I could take a copy of the Crafty source and change the evaluation routines so that all the pieces have negative value. This would play completely different moves from Crafty but is certainly not my original work and therefore would be disqualified from the WCCC (well, it would be if people could stop laughing at it). Fritz Reul has his examins in mathematics this week so it is a crime to disturb him at his home. As has been pointed out, *he* chose to enter this competition which he knew was going to be at the same time as his exams. If he didn't want to be disturbed, he shouldn't have entered the WCCC. And, tell me, how long does it take to tar cz ~/src/list-current/ | uuencode -m | mail ? OK, maybe he's not using Unix but firing up Winzip and Outlook doesn't take long, either. The tournament rules say that you mustn't steal anyone else's code and that you must co-operate with any investigations. Nobody knows whether he's stolen anyone else's code because he hasn't revealed his source. Everyone knows that he hasn't co-operated with an investigation, though, and that's why he was disqualified. Dave. -- David Richerby Psychotic Postman (TM): it's like a www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~davidr/ man who delivers the mail but it wants to kill you! |
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