What part of "I didn't remember" don't you understand? I would think that is self-explanatory. As I ALSO mentioned, the ICGA report does not mention the 0.0 issue anywhere. You do know that? Zach's report contains no 0.0 reference. Mark mentioned it, but in the context of the block of code setting up time information. One sentence in one place, one in another, out of 26 pages?Rebel wrote:Thank you for the confirmation that the info was known mid-2010 but not in the document. But let's leave Mark out of the discussion for the moment and concentrate on your role as ICGA official in charge of truth finding.hyatt wrote:Will you PLEASE stop with the lies. I did not "finger-point." I recalled, after you raised the issue, that this had been mentioned. I posted that as an honest statement. I then said "I think it might have been Mark." That is NOT "finger-pointing". I did not remember. I even asked Mark directly, and he answered that he recalled it being discussed on CCC in mid-2010. I posted that response. Yet you STILL say I am finger-pointing? you are simply a liar. An outright liar. Because you know the statement was originally an "I think it was ..." and as soon as Mark replied, I corrected it specifically and you commented on it. yet you keep up this "finger-pointing" bullshit? I don't know why I feel surprised, of course...
How is it then you failed to mention that >= actually is wrong whenever 0.0 came up in hundreds of postings. You had 100+ chances to inform your debating partners about the truth of one of the hottest debated issues and you did not. In fact you 2 months ago in reply to Miguel posted the false info:
The first looks like this:
The second is here, discussing 2.3.2a rather than 1.0 betasome commonality of UCI parsing code, including a spurious “0.0” float-based comparison in the integer-based time management code of Rybka.
There are a couple of other 0.0 strings, but they are in the code he includes.moved much of any complaint here.
I have not bothered to see when/if the UCI parsing was changed, though
a crude check19 finds code similarities in Rybka 2.3.2a (June 2007). The use
of “0.0” in time management is also still extant in Rybka 2.3.2a.
So that is a HUGE part of the evidence to you? A part that was not even mentioned in the ICGA report nor in Zach's paper? And the fact that there is an error in the comparison is therefore proof of innocence, even though it was never mentioned as proof of guilt in the final report? Why didn't I mention it? Since there was no discussion about that topic at all on the Wiki, nothing jogged my memory until YOUR post.
Let me remind you, you had the chance to participate. You chose to run and hide in a temper tantrum when Chris was not admitted. YOU made that decision, not the ICGA. Now you want to complain because something YOU considered major was not discussed. Would you have mentioned it if you had remained on the panel? Whose fault is it that you did not? A temper tantrum on your part does not constitute wrongdoing on our part.
There was no "0.0 gate" except with you, apparently. The panel didn't consider it important enough to even mention it in the report. So obviously it did not weigh on our deliberations in any significant way. If 3 characters convinced you of guilt, that says something is wrong with your reasoning abilities, not the ICGA process...
http://rybkaforum.net/cgi-bin/rybkaforu ... #pid396697
While all the time knowing (or you should have known!!) this would be a bomb under 0.0 gate?Bob wrote: Implausible.
The code was
if (movetime >= 0.0)
Says a lot about you, then. I would not convict ANYONE on a single piece of circumstantial evidence. I chose to look at the entire body of evidence, where the 0.0 doesn't mean much at all..
Remember how Zach felt about 0.0
If needed I will go to the bottom of this, I will ask each Panel member a) how strongly they felt about 0.0 and b) if they were informed that the info in Mark's document was wrong.Zach Wegner wrote: Coming back to R1/Fruit, yes, if you look at each example in detail, you can't say there is much hard evidence of direct code copying. As I said to Vas, I'm only completely certain that three characters were copied ("0.0").
For sure, I would not have signed the Fabien letter.