I would try to make a clear split between the collection of technical evidence and the evaluation of the evidence. Essentially anyone willing to spit through binaries would be allowed to report his or her findings, but these reports should focus on the facts. Rajlich would be allowed to comment on those. The evaluation of the facts should then be done by a panel of 3 persons with technical expertise, one appointed by the ICGA or whoever wants to play the role of the accuser (Letouzey is indeed an option), one by Rajlich, and the third on agreement of those two.BB+ wrote:So would the only way for the ICGA to meet any requirement herein be to find a pre-existent outside body to which both sides were agreeable?
I agree it is not entirely obvious how to follow the "after seeking expert advice" model. The 3-person panel could "advise" the ICGA Board, which would then be practically bound to follow the advice. Or the 3-person panel could play the role of the TD, but then there might not be "expert advice" (and none would be needed, as they are experts themselves).At that point, it would be hard to construe it as being merely "expert advice" anymore (cf. Rule #2 and EC procedural interpretation therein), rather it would be notably advocatory].
I would argue Rule 2 was written for in-tournament application and that there was/is no real provision to deal with the Rybka case.Taken to the absurd, could you then argue that the "seeking expert advice" in Rule #2 should thus mean an independent expert [to the extent considered above]?Advisory bodies in quasi-judicial procedures are usually required to be independent. Same for expert witnesses.
I do see why a procedure in 2011 on whether to revise tournament results from 2006, if there must be one at all, should be "fair".and don't see why post-tournament this should change to be qualified as "independent expert advice"
Fair enough. Unfortunately the ICGA Executive Board apparently considered that not deciding on 2008-10 was not an option.I think in a Panel discussion it was discussed whether the 2008-10 entries could adequately be modelled by Rybka 3 and 4, and the (only?) opinion on the matter was that this was not yet warranted.Of course the panel could not help that the ICGA Executive Board even went beyond the facts established by the panel. The panel did not establish any facts regarding Rybka 3, for example.
I doubt very much that that logic is accepted in analogous contexts. I might come back to this.When the ICGA chose to ban Rybka for life due to violating the rules in ICGA events in 2006 and 2007, this required all of Rajlich's programs be removed, since the newer programs would never have been allowed to compete if the violation of earlier versions was discovered sooner and the lifetime ban issued earlier.
I meant those in the panel report. (And to some extent the references to Rajlich's refusal to cooperate with the investigation panel made in defense of the ICGA investigation in the aftermath of the whole affair, but those do not matter much for the present discussion.)I don't remember specifically this refusal being used against him? I don't think the EC complaint specifies anything about this. I could find 3 possible "uses" of his refusal against him.
They are in the panel report, which in my view is enough to make them a problem. As I said, in my view the panel report should not have read like a verdict. I know the Charter sort of asks for a verdict, so I don't think that's correct either.If you could show a demonstrative link between the Panel comments (regarding refusal) and anything that later ensued, I would say your view might be more justified. But I would think it more to be a "minor influence" at best.
[/quote]I didn't know that Ken Thompson was one of his worst enemies.
Did KT spend any significant amount of time on digging into the matter? As far as I know only few were really active.
I would agree finding someone acceptable to both sides and willing to sacrifice a significant amount of his spare time to dig into source code provided by Rajlich could have established the facts (what did Rajlich really do / at what level of abstraction did he copy if at all) to everybody's satisfaction. I don't know if it was up to Rajlich to insist on such a course of action. Maybe it would have been a good idea to involve Rajlich in the discussion on how to shape the investigation procedure.
Btw, when did Rajlich state that he no longer had the source code of a particular version? (If you happen to know this.)