I wrote the original post on talkchess.com. This is an interesting article - thanks for posting. Unfortunately, it is rather US-centric and I don't think (although it's difficult to be entirely sure) that any claim here would be heard in the US.BB+ wrote:Seems that Alan Sassler brought up this article back when Rybka/Strelka was in vogue: http://www.btlj.org/data/articles/21_04_04.pdf
Or in a nicer format (to me): http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~tlavian/pub ... 060403.pdf
Dangerous Liaisons—Software Combinations as Derivative Works?
Distribution, Installation and Execution of Linked Programs under Copyright Law, Commdercial Licenses and the GPL
By Lothar Determann
I wrote the talkchess post after reading a number of posts on talkchess querying whether there had been a "GPL breach." However, in legal terms, Vas could be sued for copyright infringement, not for a "GPL breach." Legally, I think the GPL may be of limited relevance here. The main point of reviewing the terms of the GPL was to determine whether there are grounds for reporting the matter to the FSF. I think there clearly are such grounds, even though the drafting of the GPL is unclear in places.
The more fundamental issue is whether there has been copyright infringement. This will determine whether Fabien and/or the FSF could successfully sue Vas. If I were Fabien and I thought someone had sold a derivative of my engine for profit, I would want to know whether I could recover part of that profit from him. I avoided looking at the possibility of suing for copyright infringement in my earlier posts (principally because it was easier just to read the GPL, which is a single document!) However, I've set out some further thoughts below.
- The first step should be to determine what the FSF's attitude is. Are they prepared to take the matter to court and, if so, what remedy would they seek: damages, the withdrawal of Rybka from sale or merely the release of source code? If they are prepared to seek damages in court, are they prepared to allow the damages to be paid to Fabien, as the author of Fruit? I am assuming that, as a question of law, any damages would belong to the FSF as copyright owner, rather than to Fabien.
- On the strength of what I have read about the Fruit/Rybka similarities, I think there is a strong argument that copyright infringement has occurred. In my opinion, it would definitely be worth paying for legal advice on whether a claim for copyright infringement would have merit and, if so, what remedies would be available; in particular, what (if any) payment by way of damages could be recovered from Vas. At a reasonably educated guess, I expect that if a court does award damages, it would consider the (no doubt tortuous) question of how much of Rybka's playing strength derives from Fruit, to quantify how much of Vas' profit derives from Fabien's work - and would be influenced by experts' views on this. There is a difficulty for Fabien/ the FSF here. As I understand it, the principal issue with R1 beta was its use of Fruit eval and the plagiarised eval was replaced by Larry K’s eval in R3. If Vas’ profits from R3 and R4 are only minimally attributable to Fruit, any damages payable to the Fruit owner for copyright infringement may not include a material share of the R3/ R4 profits.
- The next question is: which jurisdiction would the claim be made in (and where to seek legal advice)? The rules for EU member states are governed by the 2001 European "Jurisdiction Regulations." The general rule is that a defendant domiciled in an EU member state should be sued in the jurisdiction of his domicile. I cannot say with any certainty where Vas is domiciled. His wikipedia page states that he is currently living in Poland but this is not enough to be sure that he is "domiciled" there. However, it may be possible to pursue the claim in a different (and possibly more favourable) jurisdiction. The Jurisdiction Regulations will determine whether or not this is possible - there are various rules, which I will not go into here.
- The best approach _may_ be simply to determine where Vas' domicile is and go to a law firm in that jurisdiction. I expect the FSF will have their own legal advisers, who would tell them what to do. If there is a desire to take legal action but uncertainty on how to proceed, I can speak to a specialist on an informal basis to find out which jurisdiction(s) to take legal advice in and how much an initial view on the chances of success/ available remedies would cost.