Hi Bob,bob wrote: My interests are a little more tightly constrained than that. I am interested in making my program stronger. And in doing so, I am interested in helping others achieve the same results. Ken Thompson, Dave Slate, Tom Truscott (Belle, chess 4.x, duchess) among others spent hours on the phone with me answering questions and helping me make my program better. And occasionally I had ideas that made theirs stronger. That's all I care about today. The commercial interests are off my radar. And always will be. If you look at 40 years of computer chess, almost all of the dishonesty, bending the rules, etc, have been done by commercial chess developers. Some of the early WMCCC events were classics in deception, dishonesty and conspiracies. Our non-commercial events went off without a hitch. Until the two were combined.
this is actually the last part.
First of all a question that interested me since long. I just ask even if it's stupid in the eyes of real experts.
In the times you created the CRAY chess computer or better the software for the CRAY, how was your code protected? Was it linked with the famous factory? So that a violation could have cost the intruder much money? I just want to ask this in our actual context because you seem so cool while debating a possible damage for the commercials like Rybka while long ago you were a commercial too, well without cutomers who could have bought it but for the company it was certainly a relevant piece of advertisement having a winning chess machine, no?
Did you have any protection at the time against cheating by opposing competition? Was that your job or was that done in the CRAY company?
Years ago you told me that those days had also a lot of stress compared to these days now. What was the reason? Could you explain it a bit? Money wise or what stress?
Another question: how was the control of new competitors done at those times? How could you experiment on their machines? Or was it more based on casual observations during the tournaments?
Back then, did you ever observe a case where something to copy had indeed been copied or stolen? How was that done, since you didnt distribute the software I assume.
Bob, another critical question:
would you totally exclude the possibility that a smart MIT absolvent could analyse the FRUIT details and then find a way to profit from that code even when he had no reason to copy the code in parts because the strength of his new engine was NOT to copy by definition since Fruit was weaker than Rybka.
Another technical lay question:
is there somewhere a collection (just as a summary of subjects) of known computerchess programming tools open to all interested? How many big topics?
Then:
A usual chessprogram, how much individually different % it contains compared with its open to all code parts? 5% or more?
Now the killer question without irony:
Why is it so difficult for making Crafty as strong as Rybka if you a) know Fruit like everybody else and b) might have got the secret tricks of
Rybka itself. Why do you chose to be below the commercial machines and now aslo these Fruit profiters?
Another important question from recent debates:
GPL topic. You argued but then didnt continue to explain that if Fruit were GPL and someone copied code from Fruit then also this copy is GPL. The question came if then Fritz and Shredder or other commercials who profited from Fruit would also be GPL in future? Or is there a method to copy that you couldnt discover? - That chapter was the reason why I asked you to help that the interested commercial programs for many million people should NOT be destroyed. And that you should help to protect them, because you as a scientist, are you not interested in the many users who use something that you helped to grow in the past decades? Your Crafty UCI is even officially on the page of ChessBase. So, excuse me, you cant be a total enemy of commercial companies in our hobby?
That's it for now. I only hope that the many readers understand the legitimity of the topics.
All the best to you for the weekend. -Rolf