This appears to contain a misunderstanding of licensing and copyright law. HG Muller explained it better than most awhile back in TalkChess. Rather: "copying" Crafty, even under the licensing agreements, is still copying per se -- the license simply gives the end-user additional rights, in particular precluding the copyright holder from undertaking legal action for said copying (presuming any license conditions are followed). Seen a different way, the Crafty license was the only thing stopping Rajlich from being subject to copyright law for his copying/modifying of Crafty -- and this disappeared when he entered Rybka into various author-based tournaments (such as ChessWar).Trotsky wrote:well, remind you, yet again, for the umpteenth time, what you now call Rybka 1.6.1 was an entirely legal version of Crafty, doing all the things Hyatt wants, eg learning about chess programming and playing around and testing Crafty source code which is freely downloadable, changing it, recompiling it, testing the chessic results.
he never distributed the program to the public for money nor gave it away to the public. his mistake was to enter it in a tournament which is counter to the Hyatt license. This is not "copying" or "plagiarism", this is entering the program into a tournament in breach of the licence, some might say trivial or technical breach, but nevertheless a breach. In the tournament, btw, it played weakly and without effect.
Once the license conditions are transgressed, the situation devolves to copyright law, with the "license violator" unable to make an appeal to the license as a warrant for any actions, but still possessing traditional defences such as "fair use", etc. I would agree that "Rybka 1.6.1 was an entirely legal version of Crafty" right up to the moment when the license was violated, at which point copyright law becomes effective. But I would say that it was "derivative" of Crafty all along. Nor would I denote such a license breach as "trivial" or "technical", but constitutive of the purpose of the license.
First, I can note that "Rybka 1.6.1"/CCT6 is wrong here, as it seems to mix-and-match various facts again. R161 was entered into Olivier Deville's tournaments (among other places and/or "basements"). The closest approximation to the CCT6 entry the Panel obtained was "Rybka 1.4" or something, I think. Rajlich did not address whether his CCT6 entry was also derivative of Crafty, and the Panel/Secretariat never pushed the issue -- the only mention of CCT6 in the Report occurred in the opinion of Peter Skinner.Trotsky wrote:My position remains clear. The "copying" and "use" of Crafty in Rybka 1.6.1 was entirely lawful and encouraged by Hyatt. There was a relatively trivial license breach by Vas when he entered Rybka 1.6.1 into the basement CCT tournament. It is perfectly valid to use the term "breach of license" in connection with this, but it is misleading and inappropriate to use the term "plagiarise".
On the note of the post in general, it makes the same error as above. Hyatt allows copying under conditions XYZ. Rajlich did not follow these conditions. Ergo, Hyatt doesn't allow such copying/distribution, and Rajlich is subject to copyright law. Hyatt could presumably take legal action against Rajlich for (partial) misappropriation, which is typically not lawful [particularly in locales such as Europe that are big on the author's "moral rights"], and not something that I would call "relatively trivial" on the whole. Given that "plagiarise" includes (gasp) "wrongful appropriation" as its primary definition, it thus seems to be an adequate term IMO.
Since my principal point seems to be a sticking point for many, I will reiterate it yet again: the Crafty license is merely one part of the copyright/licensing issue for pre-Beta Rybka versions. Once the license was violated, the entirety of copyright law then applies. By the very nature of the situation vis-a-vis copyright [and I might agree that "license" is perhaps not the best word for the concept, given its variegated construal in other contexts] it is hard for me to say that any license violation is "technical" or "trivial", particularly when the licensor makes the conditions rather precise, and the licensee inarguably violates them. Saying that the license is silly, misguided, or whatnot, entirely misses the point -- rather, the license ameliorates copyright by providing specific conditions under which the licensee can copy/modify (and perhaps distribute) the work, and (thus) the licensor is free to name these conditions even if they are onerous, imbecilic, or just plain crazy.