So you dispute Lukas' statement that SPECIFICALLY stated that he used 2.3.2a? And you do know he WAS the operator? Do you therefore claim that the versions we examined (2.3.2 and 2.3.2a) did NOT participate in an ICGA event? First, make your statement clear. It did, or it did not. No qualifiers are needed. Then we can take that statement and determine whether it is true or false...M ANSARI wrote:bob wrote:Tell Cock he is an idiot. For the following reasons...Graham Banks wrote:bob wrote:For the record, David, on behalf of the ICGA secretariat responsible for this, sent them a letter pointing out the errors in their public statement. So far as I know, we've seen nothing in response.
Copied here with Cock's permission:
Hi Graham
Ed Schröder told me about the existing open letter, which is discussed for a couple of days.
The CSVN did not receive this letter untill now. I just read it a couple of minutes ago. It is 1.18 a.m. now.
I will respond on the Net after the Board makes a decission to do so and on behalf of the Board.
First personal reaction? In short sentences....?
The ICGA made a statement, just as the CSVN did.
In their statement the Board of CSVN did his utmost to give facts. More than one. And those facts raised question marks. Not all question marks seperately were enough to refuse the banning of Rybka. Of course not. But all together they did not give us a good feeling. These facts have nothing to do with the technical stuff. The Board has no opinion about the technical stuff whatsoever, nor wants to take part in the technical discussions.
The open letter repeats the well known arguments of the ICGA cs. But does not give answers on our doubts. Why should we change our minds? I do not have a good feeling by repeating again and again. That is not debating.
In my vision it is very clear: the programmers have a problem. What is a clone? Untill now there is no clear answer on that question.
They should solve it themselves. It can not be solved by the CSVN. If all experts agree, there is no problem anymore.
After that the CSVN Board will organise again if there are enough participants..
If not? We can do many other nice things in our spare time....
kind regards
Cock de Gorter
First, he claimed that several programmers that had firmly stated that they did not believe Vas had copied Fruit code had SUDDENLY changed their minds. Ask any who have posted that thought about changing their mind. Tord. Others. They changed their mind over the 5+ years we have been gathering and presenting the data. 5+ years is "sudden"? False statement number 1.
Second, he claimed that we did not examine any public version of Rybka. That the "version" (singular, notice) we examined did not play in any ICGA event. False. We looked at Rybka 1.6.1 which was sent to ChessWar, we looked at 1.0 beta, and 2.3.2 and 2.3.2a which DID compete in the ICGA tournaments. 1.0 beta, 2.3.2 and 2.3.2a WERE distributed, and still are on the Rybka web site. We didn't just look at one version, we looked at 4. All were given to others by Vas. And we did look at a version that played in an ICGA event, as verified by the person that operated Rybka in a WCCC event (Lukas). False statement number 2.
Third, he claimed that no other WCCC competitors had been examined. False. If you go to the ICGA web site, 6 different programs have been kicked out of ICGA competitions. We are in the process of looking at another. False statement number 3.
In baseball, that is "three strikes and he's out."
Finally, his statement above, quoted here:The letter doesn't give any 'answers on their doubts'? It would appear to me it refutes every "doubt" he quoted. That's simply beyond belief... His final statement, "the programmers should decide." Which group comprises the majority of programmers? those that believe Vas copied Fruit, or those that believe he didn't? The latter list numbers just a few. Less than 6. How about the other list? 16 signed the original letter of protest. Others weighed in later, Ken Thompson, for example. He's not going "with the programmers" he is going "against them." Which is fine if he doesn't care whether they participate or not...idiot wrote:The open letter repeats the well known arguments of the ICGA cs. But does not give answers on our doubts. Why should we change our minds?
The statement about the engine that participated not being tested is not "FALSE". Why the hell do you want to twist the facts. Rybka 2.3.2a DID NOT participate in the ICGA and neither did Rybka 1.6 or Rybka 1.0 beta. The only time Rybka 2.3.2a participated was for a few games when the Rybka that was playing the ICGA (which was clearly different from Rybka 2.3.2a) was not able to connect due to some technical problems and thus a generic Rybka 2.3.2a on a laptop was used.
Did it or did it not compete in an ICGA event (2.3.2a, specifically)???
BTW, the "other version" was still a standard 2.3.2 but simply had egtb paths hard-coded into the engine. Not exactly a "significant change." But he specifically said 2.3.2a played. Whether it was for one game or 10 tournaments does NOT matter. It played.