Replies: 11 comments 19 replies
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maybe using a tool like that on Komodo site to measure distance between
engine from what i understand to be from some input output behavior
analysis could help find "phenotypic" relationships with other engines?
Interesting anecdote this topic.. stood out in my email folder.
Le 11/07/2023 à 20:29, mstembera a écrit :
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@AndyGrant <https://github.com/AndyGrant>
Hi Andrew,
I am reaching out to you as the person who is in charge of the CCC
tournaments at chess.com. Some time ago a new Mystery engine was
introduced as part of an exhibition or bonus series at CCC. I thought
this was a fun way to introduce a new engine but always expected its
identity would be revealed after the bonuses. However, Mystery is now
participating in the actual CCC competition still anonymous. CCC has a
policy of letting authors withdraw engines from competition upon
request. Koivisto being a recent example. I would like to make such a
request on behalf of Stockfish. That is I do not wish to compete
against any engine whose author and origin have not been disclosed. We
had issues in the past w/ Houdart cloning SF and passing it off as
Houdini as well as Chessbase releasing SF as Fritz. These were settled
in court. I am NOT accusing Mystery of anything and in fact wish it
well. However while it remains mysterious there is no way to tell. I
should add that I am not a maintainer and only one of many SF
developers and contributors. As such I only speak for myself and don't
know to what extent I can make this request.
Thank you.
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I don't think @mstembera speaks on behalf of the Stockfish team, so while I respect your asking, I will not be making any changes. Mystery is not a Stockfish fork. You should very well know my position regarding Houdini, Fire, DeusX, Fat Fritz II, and all those around it. You can take my word for it if you like, or not. Perhaps in the future some others will step forward to offer the same commentary I've offered here. |
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@AndyGrant I do take your word that Mystery is not a SF fork. It is really the principle of competing against anonymous engines I have an issue with. I am simply asking for the courtesy of knowing my opponent. I do just speak for myself and while I don't know how other contributors feel I suspect that many would feel better if Mystery came forward. I welcome everyones comments here. |
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@AndyGrant If it's not before we play any more games against Mystery it is not soon enough. It's is quite biased from a tournament director to give special treatment to one participant. To other SF contributors: We suffer a bit from not having a single voice. We can however use a form of the democratic process to have our collective voices heard. If you would prefer not to play against Mystery until it's author and origin is disclosed please give this a👍. If not give a 👎. I promise to abide by the results as I hope does @AndyGrant. |
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Since I was asked my perspective, I can share. First, I usually don't correspond with CCC on SF participation. There have been interactions on the hardware and SF configuration, but very limited. This is good so, I don't want to be involved in every and any tournament that is out there, and CCC is generally well managed, which is nice as that builds trust. Having said that, these events with "gimmick" engines (e.g. Dragon/Komodo with changed parameters) nor the current mystery engine are something that adds to the standing of the tournament. Imagine that the human chess WC challenger match would have a participant with concealed identity... Additionally, the community has had some bad experiences with engines that concealed their true identity, which is why there is, understandably, some increased sensitivity. However, from the organizer's point of view there can be different objectives of the tournament, and creating some 'hype' around an engine and/or chess can be one. That's not our decision to take. As such, I see no reason to request withdrawal at the tournament, I'm fine to ignore the hype building aspect, and enjoy the good quality matches otherwise. |
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This is contradictory. An the one hand you are unilaterally requesting the withdrawal of Stockfish from the competition and on the other hand acknowledging that you are not a maintainer and that you only speak for yourself. It doesn't make sense that any contributor would have the unilateral power to withdraw the engine they contributed to from competitions. In my opinion you should've asked the community first (and Vondele in particular) before making such request and mentioning Andrew. |
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That is what he is trying to do. He is exerting his freedom of speech to do so, that´s the way he thinks and many thinks equal to him (me included). Do not ask for perfection in "modus operandi" nor expect it from mstembera (he is just human as one of us). That was the way he found to express his concern about competing against anonymous engines and I support him.
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To close this discussion: https://www.chess.com/news/view/torch-chess-engine And from Andrew:
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So we just found out that Andrew has been secretly using his position as tournament director to give special privilege to an engine of which he is a coauthor. Nothing to see here. |
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chess and secrets!
Le 15/07/2023 à 19:59, mstembera a écrit :
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What part of undisclosed conflict of interest should I reiterate?
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@mstembera, When a chess engine is not open source, How do you recognize if it's a Stockfish fork or not?! Even the new Ethereal version is not open source and it is possible that Stockfish's code has been used in it. |
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@AndyGrant
Hi Andrew,
I am reaching out to you as the person who is in charge of the CCC tournaments at chess.com. Some time ago a new Mystery engine was introduced as part of an exhibition or bonus series at CCC. I thought this was a fun way to introduce a new engine but always expected its identity would be revealed after the bonuses. However, Mystery is now participating in the actual CCC competition still anonymous. CCC has a policy of letting authors withdraw engines from competition upon request. Koivisto being a recent example. I would like to make such a request on behalf of Stockfish. That is I do not wish to compete against any engine whose author and origin have not been disclosed. We had issues in the past w/ Houdart cloning SF and passing it off as Houdini as well as Chessbase releasing SF as Fritz. These were settled in court. I am NOT accusing Mystery of anything and in fact wish it well. However while it remains mysterious there is no way to tell. I should add that I am not a maintainer and only one of many SF developers and contributors. As such I only speak for myself and don't know to what extent I can make this request.
Thank you.
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