Uly wrote:Here is where the analogy breaks down, there are no tournaments for remixed music. I think the Rybka case is unrelated to illegal MP3s in the internet, or ripping commercial songs from CDs and releasing them. So it's not an argument for "not testing an engine once it's found it's not original".K I Hyams wrote:4. Whether competitors in tournaments containing the remix have been given the complete picture.
My answer was a direct response to the comment below, which had shifted the emphasis away from eligibility of derivatives in tournaments and towards general acceptability of derivatives.
If you want an answer to the question of acceptability within tournaments, I would suggest trying to interpret the attitudes of those who write chess programs. Perhaps the attitudes of the majority of that cohort can be characterised as follows:Uly wrote: Because it's not the same song, it's a remix. If the remix sounds so much better, why would I be happy playing just the original?
1. They are indifferent to private individuals setting up and posting the results of tournaments that contain derivatives.
2. They tolerate groups of amateurs such as CEGT setting up and publishing the results of tournaments that contain derivatives.
3. They are violently opposed to official events, accepting entries from engines that are derivatives.
If those assumptions are correct, I think that they are all reasonable attitudes.