I see the claim Vas only took code because he was Lazy, not to help Rybka's Elo. Vas only stole code that any program needed just to save time, it had nothing to do with Rybka's elo rating.
"Vasik did some copying which was wrong and he had been 'stoned' and so all's over for the copying that added no ELO"
This is not true, those people need to read the report! And stop playing spin doctor for Vas.
From the report:
2.2 Sudden Strength Increase. Early versions of Rybka had a much lower rating.
For example, in the Chesswar 7 tournament:
http://www.open-aurec.com/chesswar/
Chesswar007/Chesswar007CSt.htm, Rybka had a rating estimate of only 2064 ELO
(pre-Rybka version 1.6.1 was dated 19 April 2004). In a little over a year, its rating
had jumped in Rybka 1.0 beta to 2919 ELO (
http://computerchess.org.uk/ccrl/4040/
rating_list_all.html). Rajlich has offered no explanation for the enormous rating increase over such a short period. Historically, after the first year of development, programs
increase a maximum of 50-100 ELO per year.
2.3 Statements by Vasik Rajlich: Vasik Rajlich has made many statements about the
originality of Rybka.
In a CCC post of Dec 16 2005, Rajlich stated:
"As far as I know, Rybka has a very original search and evaluation framework.”
http://www.stmintz.com/ccc/index.php?id=470751.
Based on the analysis in 2.1 above, this statement is false.
In an email with Zach Wegner, Rajlich wrote:
“FWIW Vasik told me this in private correspondence:
"Rybka started as a bitboard/MTD(f)/UCI engine back in March 2003. Everything
I did after that, until today, has been incremental - although there were some
pretty sharp turns. I can't imagine ever ditching my code base."
Based on the massive changes between pre Rybka 1.6.1 and Rybka 1.0 beta
documented in 2.1 and the ICGA Wiki, this statement is false.
4. Conclusions
● Vasik Rajlich’s claims of complete originality are not borne out by the facts.
Rybka’s rapid strength growth (over 800 ELO in about one year) is largely due
to copying evaluation terms and programming methods from Fruit 2.1. Rajlich’s
claim that “Rybka has a very original search and evaluation framework” is false.
The “framework” of Rybka 1.0 beta through Rybka 2.3.2a is Fruit. Rajlich’s “wild
guess” that Fruit only made Rybka 20 rating points stronger is, to put it mildly,
highly doubtful. The sudden and dramatic increase in Rybka’s playing strength
appears to be due to copying from Fruit in violation of the Fruit license.