I don't really think that is true. Surely any organization has a right to enforce their own set of rules for participation. If you disagree with the rules don't play or try to get the rules changed.jdart wrote:I continue to have a bad feeling about the result, if not the process.
One of ICGA's core problems now is that maybe once it was representative of the community of people who are hands-on engaged with computer chess. But that ceased to be true quite a long time ago. How many in this forum are members? Then, it is not surprising that their tournaments don't reflect the full spectrum of computer chess activity. (I am not talking here about the clones of questionable legality but all the activity and innovation that hundreds of programmers have done in the past 10 years). And now the recent investigation and banning have turned off some who might have participated.
I think your argument should be for a change of rules if you really feel like that the current ones should not be enforced.
The ICGA has always been in favor of innovation, so your comments are way off base. For years they published articles in their magazine (and still do) pertaining to computer chess advancements have very heavy roots in academia.
Trying to make them sound anti-innovation is really a poor argument that does not reflect the actual facts, and it is more unfair propaganda. What they are encouraging is diversity which is going to aid innovation. Copying someone else's program is NOT innovation, I'm sorry and I cannot understand why anyone thinks this is "innovation."
--Jon