marcelk wrote:bob wrote:We wanted the most qualified people we could find. If the commercial authors were eliminated, the next step would be the amateur authors, I mean we do enter chess tournaments and Rybka could be there, correct? And then after we eliminate the commercial and amateur authors, we have to eliminate ANY potential chess programmer, because if they were to write a program, then they would likely compete, and have that "conflict of interests" issue as well.
That is not a consequence but an unneeded exaggeration.
Not an exaggeration at all. They would like to see anyone that belongs to any one (or more) of the following groups to be disqualified:
(1) commercial authors, both past, present and future, past because they would "move up" in the final standings if Rybka is eliminated; present because they would compete now; future because anyone could end up competing against Rybka in the future.
(2) amateur authors, both past, present and future, for the same reasons. Apparently we can not compete equally due to insufficient intellect, so we would have a vested interest in seeing Rybka disqualified to get it out of the way. Never mind that those of us that really enjoy fair competition ALWAYS want to compete against the best there is.
(3) potential authors. Same deal.
(4) programmers with even a remote interest in computer chess, because they might join groupls 1 or 2 above.
Who is left?
This is all simply a red-herring.
You REALLY think I would let a commercial author convince me to vote for something I didn't believe, or not vote for something I did believe? That is, quite simply, nonsense.
Here you touch the point precisely: You
also had a deeply vested interest in the outcome of the investigation:
1. as the author of a copied program (ok, discovered during the process, but at that point you could have recused yourself).
What nonsense. Until March of this year, no one had any idea about the early versions of Rybka being complete knock-offs of Crafty 19.x... By then the secretariat was formed, the panel was convened, and the investigation was nearing the end. I should have recused myself at the end? Why?
2. as somebody who had proclaimed his stance upfront and is known to never ever let himself to be seen as "wrong". Hence the urge to always reply to every thread in every forum where you see something to be corrected, preferably until the other doesn't reply anymore and "the record is set". Hence also the refusal of Chris's panel participation at the first possible technical possibility ("e-mail verification").
Chris could not wait for a simple weekend to pass. A weekend where I was out of town. Sorry, but if 48 hours is "too long" then that is "too bad." Others had to wait. We wanted to make sure that we had no "doppelgangers" slipping in to create discord. The "real Chris" would have been enough discord. So this excuse simply won't fly.
Would the investigation outcome be different without your participation? How many minds were really needed? I would say at most 5 or 6 for this specific hard case. There were more than enough people available without such vested interests.
Those on the panel will tell you I was not very vocal during the discussions. I had seen the evidence many times, my intent was to let everyone have sufficient time to reach their own conclusion. Which they did. Ask any panel member if there was any bullying or anything similar... I don't think removing any person other than Mark or Zach would have mattered at all, and eliminating one of them would have simply stretched the time-frame out. This case was not a "close call" at all.
bob wrote:
marcelk wrote: Would the investigation outcome be different without the "3"...?
Nope. We just would have had 13 voting rather than 16. 13 voting "he broke the rules" as opposed to 16. Would that matter?
Yes, it would be one step to take angles out and keep focus on the facts and waste less energy on diversions.
There was no way to eliminate "diversions." Every trial with a guilty verdict ends in an appeal...
bob wrote:The Rybka Forum folks would have howled long and loud, just as they did with the current panel. This was not about the panel, or the people involved, nor the evidence presented, it was ONLY about the verdict... And unless the verdict was different, the discussions would have been exactly the same.
Absolutely not. They will "howl" as long as you post in their forum rubbing against their hairs, throwing salt in the wounds, generally not precisely reading to what you are responding to, getting things slightly mixed up once in a while when posting, trying to defend such slips making a lot of waves that way and underestimating their intelligence in general. As long as there is a bleeding finger in the water, the sharks will hunt... The frequency will drop the moment "they" are allowed to settle on their own form of agreement and move forward. It will not go away, of course there will be disgruntlement. You cannot make it go away by replying to all of their posts.
I came NOWHERE near to "replying to all their posts". But there are a few that are not willing to listen to technical explanations, or anything, and just mindlessly repeat, over and over, "Vas didn't copy any code..."