ethical dilemma

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Uri Blass
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Re: ethical dilemma

Post by Uri Blass »

Albert Silver wrote:
Rolf wrote:
bob wrote:I don't have a "beef" with Vas. Specifically. I have a generic beef with anyone that asks lots of questions, gets detailed answers, then clams up and goes away. Lots of questions until he finds something new and better, then nothing...

You don't have to "wade thru countless posts" to figure that out. Several have voiced that opinion over the years. It hasn't been a secret...
Ok, I'll bite. To the best of my knowledge nobody besides you does ever ride on that pony and you are no evidence sitting on a safe chair at university. But what somehow stinks me is this: nobody else got such evil press comments from your side, no Uniake, SMK, no Ban, no Morsch or Feist. Only Rajlich now. That simply is something I wont classify here because it would mean a case for moderation. Too many here told you that they are completely astonished about you with that inconsistent position. You have more than one beef against Vas.
His number one beef is that Vas did it in 6 months, and won't tell him how. The punk. How dare he do in 6 months what others take years to do, if ever??

He feels this obligates Vas to tell him how he did it. Instead of lauding him as a genius, which most normal people would, he feels this justifies stealing his work to "level the playing field". A euphemism for saying that if someone can't do as well, steal it. It's ok. You have Bob's blessing. He won't lose any sleep over it.

Albert
Note that I agree that nothing bad can be said about Vas for not releasing his code but I am not sure if what happened can be defined as "stealing his work".

Vasik allowed other people to use rybka beta exe file with no restriction
so I am not sure if something illegal happened.

Note that I do not remember other programmers that wrote that they allow to use their exe with no restriction so it is possible that the legal situation with other free programs may be different than free rybka.

I am not sure about the laws here.

Uri
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Rolf
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Re: ethical dilemma

Post by Rolf »

Albert Silver wrote:
Rolf wrote:
bob wrote:I don't have a "beef" with Vas. Specifically. I have a generic beef with anyone that asks lots of questions, gets detailed answers, then clams up and goes away. Lots of questions until he finds something new and better, then nothing...

You don't have to "wade thru countless posts" to figure that out. Several have voiced that opinion over the years. It hasn't been a secret...
Ok, I'll bite. To the best of my knowledge nobody besides you does ever ride on that pony and you are no evidence sitting on a safe chair at university. But what somehow stinks me is this: nobody else got such evil press comments from your side, no Uniake, SMK, no Ban, no Morsch or Feist. Only Rajlich now. That simply is something I wont classify here because it would mean a case for moderation. Too many here told you that they are completely astonished about you with that inconsistent position. You have more than one beef against Vas.
His number one beef is that Vas did it in 6 months, and won't tell him how. The punk. How dare he do in 6 months what others take years to do, if ever??

He feels this obligates Vas to tell him how he did it. Instead of lauding him as a genius, which most normal people would, he feels this justifies stealing his work to "level the playing field". A euphemism for saying that if someone can't do as well, steal it. It's ok. You have Bob's blessing. He won't lose any sleep over it.

Albert
Also the true Bob mentions Crafty from time to time. You must decide if that isnt spooky.

But seriously. Perhaps I'm the very first one who reveils it but couldnt it be that the true Bob, not the one who sleeps so much, gave everything he really knew to Vasik and his project and that in reality makes the fundaments of Vas' real progress? Nothing against Vas but I still have a deep admiration for the computerchess king Bob Hyatt. Now crucify me, but that is for me a possible interpretation. The 'new' Bob is psychologically simply not totally believable with certain opinions which the 'old' Bob would have laughed at. Now help me God!
-Popper and Lakatos are good but I'm stuck on Leibowitz
Albert Silver
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Re: ethical dilemma

Post by Albert Silver »

Uri Blass wrote:
Albert Silver wrote:
Rolf wrote:
bob wrote:I don't have a "beef" with Vas. Specifically. I have a generic beef with anyone that asks lots of questions, gets detailed answers, then clams up and goes away. Lots of questions until he finds something new and better, then nothing...

You don't have to "wade thru countless posts" to figure that out. Several have voiced that opinion over the years. It hasn't been a secret...
Ok, I'll bite. To the best of my knowledge nobody besides you does ever ride on that pony and you are no evidence sitting on a safe chair at university. But what somehow stinks me is this: nobody else got such evil press comments from your side, no Uniake, SMK, no Ban, no Morsch or Feist. Only Rajlich now. That simply is something I wont classify here because it would mean a case for moderation. Too many here told you that they are completely astonished about you with that inconsistent position. You have more than one beef against Vas.
His number one beef is that Vas did it in 6 months, and won't tell him how. The punk. How dare he do in 6 months what others take years to do, if ever??

He feels this obligates Vas to tell him how he did it. Instead of lauding him as a genius, which most normal people would, he feels this justifies stealing his work to "level the playing field". A euphemism for saying that if someone can't do as well, steal it. It's ok. You have Bob's blessing. He won't lose any sleep over it.

Albert
Note that I agree that nothing bad can be said about Vas for not releasing his code but I am not sure if what happened can be defined as "stealing his work".

Vasik allowed other people to use rybka beta exe file with no restriction
so I am not sure if something illegal happened.

Note that I do not remember other programmers that wrote that they allow to use their exe with no restriction so it is possible that the legal situation with other free programs may be different than free rybka.

I am not sure about the laws here.

Uri
I'm not a lawyer either, but I am pretty certain that if it were to be judged by US intellectual property laws, that unrestricted use of a program would be interpreted as meaning running the program, and that if Vas had wanted to share the internal organs of Rybka, he would simply have published the source code.

I think the only element that would be debated, and subject to proof, would be whether Strelka did indeed use parts of Rybka. However, if this doubt were not in debate, I don't think there would be any question on guilt as per law.

Albert
playjunior
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Re: ethical dilemma

Post by playjunior »

Nicely put Albert. I completely agree.
If there is a public bus and I can take a ride for free, it doesn't mean I can take the bus, drive it home, paint it with different color, change the bumpers and claim it my own. These are different things.
Terry McCracken
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Re: ethical dilemma

Post by Terry McCracken »

Albert Silver wrote:
Uri Blass wrote:
Albert Silver wrote:
Rolf wrote:
bob wrote:I don't have a "beef" with Vas. Specifically. I have a generic beef with anyone that asks lots of questions, gets detailed answers, then clams up and goes away. Lots of questions until he finds something new and better, then nothing...

You don't have to "wade thru countless posts" to figure that out. Several have voiced that opinion over the years. It hasn't been a secret...
Ok, I'll bite. To the best of my knowledge nobody besides you does ever ride on that pony and you are no evidence sitting on a safe chair at university. But what somehow stinks me is this: nobody else got such evil press comments from your side, no Uniake, SMK, no Ban, no Morsch or Feist. Only Rajlich now. That simply is something I wont classify here because it would mean a case for moderation. Too many here told you that they are completely astonished about you with that inconsistent position. You have more than one beef against Vas.
His number one beef is that Vas did it in 6 months, and won't tell him how. The punk. How dare he do in 6 months what others take years to do, if ever??

He feels this obligates Vas to tell him how he did it. Instead of lauding him as a genius, which most normal people would, he feels this justifies stealing his work to "level the playing field". A euphemism for saying that if someone can't do as well, steal it. It's ok. You have Bob's blessing. He won't lose any sleep over it.

Albert
Note that I agree that nothing bad can be said about Vas for not releasing his code but I am not sure if what happened can be defined as "stealing his work".

Vasik allowed other people to use rybka beta exe file with no restriction
so I am not sure if something illegal happened.

Note that I do not remember other programmers that wrote that they allow to use their exe with no restriction so it is possible that the legal situation with other free programs may be different than free rybka.

I am not sure about the laws here.

Uri
I'm not a lawyer either, but I am pretty certain that if it were to be judged by US intellectual property laws, that unrestricted use of a program would be interpreted as meaning running the program, and that if Vas had wanted to share the internal organs of Rybka, he would simply have published the source code.

I think the only element that would be debated, and subject to proof, would be whether Strelka did indeed use parts of Rybka. However, if this doubt were not in debate, I don't think there would be any question on guilt as per law.

Albert
Vas has stated categorically that Strelka is a Rybka Clone. Go to the Hiarcs Forum and read it for yourself. It's in the General Forum Main Lobby posted by Harvey.

It explains it all.

Terry
Albert Silver
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Re: ethical dilemma

Post by Albert Silver »

Terry McCracken wrote:
Albert Silver wrote:I'm not a lawyer either, but I am pretty certain that if it were to be judged by US intellectual property laws, that unrestricted use of a program would be interpreted as meaning running the program, and that if Vas had wanted to share the internal organs of Rybka, he would simply have published the source code.

I think the only element that would be debated, and subject to proof, would be whether Strelka did indeed use parts of Rybka. However, if this doubt were not in debate, I don't think there would be any question on guilt as per law.

Albert
Vas has stated categorically that Strelka is a Rybka Clone. Go to the Hiarcs Forum and read it for yourself. It's in the General Forum Main Lobby posted by Harvey.

It explains it all.

Terry
What does that have to do with a court of law?

Albert
Terry McCracken
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Re: ethical dilemma

Post by Terry McCracken »

bob wrote:
Terry McCracken wrote:
bob wrote:
Terry McCracken wrote:
bob wrote:
Terry McCracken wrote:
bob wrote:
Gerd Isenberg wrote:With hindsight - after Vasik's statement - Strelka's source shouldn't be published. It is a great source, but contains reverse engeneered stuff from a commercial program. The bitboard infra-structure, the unique way to index and use pre-calculated tables by pawn-structure and material etc..

How would chessbase act, if somebody publishes decompiled fritz-sources?

The ethical dilemma now - the idea of science (and open source) to share and publish ideas - versus the violated vital interests of a commercial programmer, whose initial ideas got uncovered and illegally published.

The source, already widespreaded, will engourage other programmers to use ideas from it, even if the original source got banned by a restraining order. We will likely get more clones. Some may adapt their own bitboard infrastructure with the search and evaluation routines of Strelka, or simply replace identifiers or simplify some expressions. The less they understand the semantics and principles, the more likely they may simply copy and paste on syntactical level.

Is it for instance ethically correct now, to discuss or explain the ideas - to encourage people to implement those ideas on their own way?
If that is true, I wonder how much of other already-released programs are incorporated into Rybka? Sounds a lot like the old pot/kettle thing to me... I'd bet you could find parts of other programs scattered in Rybka. He was not the one to "invent" the bitboard stuff at all, and I'd bet there are exactly zero "new bitboard tricks" in Rybka.

This is a tired, old, pointless discussion IMHO...

A day will come when Rybka is "yesterday's news" and this will all end by a natural death...
Oh yes, why don't you post this in the Rybka Forum? :lol:
Why would I care enough to waste the time???
Why are you wasting time with this issue, if you don't care???
It was being held in a forum where I participate. Why would I want to go to a forum that discusses a commercial program??? Particularly when I know that the author is not going to supply any technical details at all...
Nor would SMK or any commercial programmer, here or anywhere else outside which is already known or won't compromise their business.

What really is your beef with Vasik?

Has he done something truly unethical?

I'd really would like to know and in a concise format.

I don't want to piece it together by wading through countless posts.

Terry
I don't have a "beef" with Vas. Specifically. I have a generic beef with anyone that asks lots of questions, gets detailed answers, then clams up and goes away. Lots of questions until he finds something new and better, then nothing...

You don't have to "wade thru countless posts" to figure that out. Several have voiced that opinion over the years. It hasn't been a secret...
Then you have a generic beef with most if not all commercial programmers.

They all did the same damn thing! They came, they discussed and they left.

Terry
Terry McCracken
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Re: ethical dilemma

Post by Terry McCracken »

Albert Silver wrote:
Terry McCracken wrote:
Albert Silver wrote:I'm not a lawyer either, but I am pretty certain that if it were to be judged by US intellectual property laws, that unrestricted use of a program would be interpreted as meaning running the program, and that if Vas had wanted to share the internal organs of Rybka, he would simply have published the source code.

I think the only element that would be debated, and subject to proof, would be whether Strelka did indeed use parts of Rybka. However, if this doubt were not in debate, I don't think there would be any question on guilt as per law.

Albert
Vas has stated categorically that Strelka is a Rybka Clone. Go to the Hiarcs Forum and read it for yourself. It's in the General Forum Main Lobby posted by Harvey.

It explains it all.

Terry
What does that have to do with a court of law?

Albert
Well we'll find out if the guy tries to do the same with the latest version of Rybka, (he's threatened to do so), but if he has any brains he won't go that far as he'll be sued!

You can bet on that!

Terry
bob
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Re: ethical dilemma

Post by bob »

geots wrote:
bob wrote:
hristo wrote:
bob wrote:
hristo wrote:
bob wrote:
Eelco de Groot wrote:
Guetti wrote:It appears that it was ethically wrong to disassemble Rybka in the first place, but I think it was the best decision to make the source available to all people, instead of making them available to only 'selected' people. As soon as some persons got the source, and could analyze or modify it, I felt that it was only fair if everybody had the chance to do so. So I'm glad the sources are available now. Furthermore, the Rybka version it derives from is 2 years old, as I understand.
I don't really want to get in on this discussion, but I don't really understand this. Publishing the sources from strelka was of course no friendly act. The people that do this, they are just the equivalent of programming hooligans, or whatever term you want to come up with, they do this for the attention they are getting and the interest people have in learning about programming ideas that were not meant to be made public by the author.

Is it okay to rob a bank as long as you don't keep the money for yourself but give it away to everybody else, stealing from the rich and giving to the poor? Osipov as Robin Hood? 'Hood' is right, Robin Hood I don't think so...

There is really no waterproof programming way to protect the intellectual property of programmers ideas for long by encryption, obfuscation or whatever, but if a whole community of looters actively would start banding together to decipher commercial programs, chess programs in this case, publishing the sources for everybody, to spread as many clones as possible, under any name they can come up with, what chance do you stand as a lone commercial programmer against that?

This does not hurt computer chess? Would you justify this? Come on people!

Eelco
OK, then what about the people that come here, ask questions, get lots of ideas and algorithms from active programmers, then they find a new idea, hide it and go commercial. I think they are "hooligans" just as much as this case.
Robert,
if we extend your example then "all those students who go to universities and later invent something and use their invention to become successful are also hulligans." ... that doesn't seem right. The reason is that there is no equivalence, neither in spirit nor intent, that can be drawn between a forum where people exchange ideas, learning from one another, hoping to invent something and the action of stealing the unique ideas that someone might actually have.

Regards,
Hristo
For me, that analogy doesn't work. Here's why. At the university, there is a specific "quid-pro-quo" between faculty and students. Students pay tuition, which pays our salaries. We, in turn, teach the students about various subjects. There is a two-way interchange.

Between many of us here, there is a two-way interchange. We discuss ideas, we exchange ideas, we make suggestions, we might keep secrets for a tournament, but then we reveal what we are doing (in my case, this is pretty obvious since I release source).

The example I cited was missing exactly 1/2 of that. Discuss ideas, ask questions, even get pointers that take you in a good direction, but once you discover something new and different, clam up...

Not what we in academia do at all, which was my point...
Robert,
in a different world it would be possible to share ideas and property and be happy. But in our world we need people to be successful in order to have you (educational system) and other people be employed -- and this often means not sharing for free, but instead making money.
It seems that you claim that so long as one has paid money for the education received then one can "clam up", but if one has received education (knowldge) without actually paying to academia then one must contribute all ideas back to the general public.

This, if that is what you are saying, is untenable and contrary to the way our society works.

Many people don't have the funds that you have to run computer labs (clusters) to test their ideas and must find resources -- some of those resources might come from the application and development of their own ideas. It is not an easy path to start a business and make a living and pay taxes (some of which go towards funding universities) when people are unscrupulous and willing to demolish your chances for success -- merely because some believe that the inventor doesn't have a right to his own invention.

I have a fundamental problem with the above expressed [yours] notion that "Unless academia is paid up you don't have a right to your own ideas".

Regards,
Hristo
I didn't say what you are thinking. I said the analogy doesn't apply because of the fact that you pay to take classes. But let's take just two people here. A asks B (and others) about many technical details he does not understand. He asks them about very complex ideas that have been revealed but which he does not understand some aspects of. As B is working on something brand new, he also answers questions about that. A now uses all of that information to write a program, and as he stumbles along, he finds something that has not been identified as "good" although B might have given him a pointer into that direction. A now takes this, develops it, and gives B nothing in return for all the help.

Reasonable? Fortunately, during the 1970's and 1980's, it didn't work like that, or computer chess would be a decade or two behind where it is today.

Bob, im confused here. I read your "A" and "B" explanation above. And i have read more than once where in the past you stated that "certain people" or "certain person" has come on CCC, benefited greatly from ideas he got there, and then went off on his own and impemented these ideas with some of his own. It sounds to me like you believe whoever this person is, he could not have accomplished what he has without the benefit of knowledge gained from others. And you have stated that he was not willing to come back and share any of his thoughts or programming ideas. Im not concerned at all with the truthfulness of these statements one way or the other. What i would like- instead of referring to him or them as "A" or "B" or "this guy" or 'that person"- is for you to put a name to the exact person or persons you are referring to right here on the forum for all to see. Now that would really be something- tho i know it wont happen.
I don't believe there is any existing algorithm used in computer chess that could not be re-invented from scratch. That should actually be intuitively obvious. But would you not agree that by "standing on the shoulders of others" you get a great boost with little effort?

I only wish most could have been around in the days of greenblatt (mack hack), kozdrowicki (coko), slate (chess 4.x/nuchess), Thompson (multiple versions of belle with and without hardware), Truscott/Wright (duchess), Schwartz (chaos), dan/kathe spracklen (multiple programs), Newborn (ostrich), Marsland (awit), Wendroff (lachex), Donskly (Kaissa), Scherzer (Bebe), Beal (program + papers), Kittinger (wchess among others), and a great number of others too numerous to mention. They all worked in a spirit of mutual benefit. And computer chess greatly benefitted. Some still work in that spirit today, no need to name them as most know who they are. But some do not. If someone works in a closet to develop an engine, more power to them. Even if they use published information, fine. But to ask dozens of questions, send hundreds of emails, and then disappear? A bit much, IMHO. If someone were to email me and say "I am thinking of doing a commercial chess program, will you answer these questions to get me started?" My answer would be "no"...
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Rolf
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Re: ethical dilemma

Post by Rolf »

Terry McCracken wrote:
Albert Silver wrote:
Terry McCracken wrote:
Albert Silver wrote:I'm not a lawyer either, but I am pretty certain that if it were to be judged by US intellectual property laws, that unrestricted use of a program would be interpreted as meaning running the program, and that if Vas had wanted to share the internal organs of Rybka, he would simply have published the source code.

I think the only element that would be debated, and subject to proof, would be whether Strelka did indeed use parts of Rybka. However, if this doubt were not in debate, I don't think there would be any question on guilt as per law.

Albert
Vas has stated categorically that Strelka is a Rybka Clone. Go to the Hiarcs Forum and read it for yourself. It's in the General Forum Main Lobby posted by Harvey.

It explains it all.

Terry
What does that have to do with a court of law?

Albert
Well we'll find out if the guy tries to do the same with the latest version of Rybka, (he's threatened to do so), but if he has any brains he won't go that far as he'll be sued!

You can bet on that!

Terry

Yes, simple enough. I gues you will have the exact address of the then crime offender, because we havnt.. I have a helping idea. We make hostages among all Russians in the diaspora until they help us discover that anonymous figure. Shabalov is an example who could either help us search the guy or he will simply stop playing chess on the many tournaments. Canada has many East European players too. Make hostages until these types come to the surface. Twit for twat. Just making loud thoughts.
-Popper and Lakatos are good but I'm stuck on Leibowitz