There is nothing wrong with looking at one evidence at the time. What prompted me to look at this was the exaggerated claims I saw in R forum. I started with:wgarvin wrote:Miguel, I respect what you're trying to do, to show that the PST similarity may not be so significant. If it were the only similarity, all this debate about whether or not the PSTs could end up being structurally similar if they were independently developed from first principles, would be more interesting. I think Mark W. and Zach both acknowledged in their reports that the PSTs by themselves were not strong evidence of copying (but I dont have them handy right now to go back and check).
"Zach's speech is different than Bob. Zach's evidence, which involved a lot of careful work, is compatible with Zachs' theory that Vas started with Fruit, and kept modifying it until obtaining R1. Note that I said it is compatible, if it is a demonstration, it is another issue (let's not go into that yet). In other words, Zach's evidence and his interpretation is a valid explanation. The key question here should be: Is it the only explanation? That is where the effort should be placed. Bob's speech imply a blatant cut and paste."
The more I looked, the more unconvinced I became. At this point, I believe that Zach PST evidence is very important for 1) historical reasons. It shows Fruit's influence on R1 and that he at least learned from the PSTs. 2) It does not allow Vas to say that PST values are proof that this part of the engine is completely detached from Fruit. But, I do not believe they are evidence for incrimination. In this respect, I believe they have zero value. Zach destroyed an alibi, but that does not mean the accused was in the crime scene, to give a silly analogy. If you really believe this evidence has any weight, you should really consider that Stockfish has copied Fruit (still legal, though, but legality is a different point).
Miguel
But the PST similarity is only one element of the eval that ended up being extremely similar between Rybka 1.0 Beta and Fruit 2.1. And if you consider the totality of that evidence, and apply the principle of Occam's Razor, the obvious conclusion is that Vas simply copied them from Fruit along with everything else, scaled the weights to finer values, and tuned them or adjusted them.
I considered the evidence of the evaluation features much more damning than the PSTs, which are only one piece of the puzzle here (though it does fit with the rest).