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WCCC 2006

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The '''Fourteenth World Computer Chess Championship''' took place from May 25 to June 1, [[Timeline#2006|2006]], in the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oval_Lingotto Oval Lingotto], [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turin Turin], [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italy Italy], in conjunction with the [[11th Computer Olympiad]] <ref>[http://www.yss-aya.com/photo/20060525torino/index01.html Computer Olympiad in Torino, Italy] by [[Hiroshi Yamashita]]</ref>, the [[CG 2006|5th International Conference on Computers and Games]] <ref>[http://www.cs.unimaas.nl/cg2006/ Computer and Games Conference CG2006]</ref> , and the human [[FIDE]] [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/37th_Chess_Olympiad 37th Chess Olympiad]. Local organizer of the WCCC and Computer Olympiad was [[Paolo Ciancarini]] from the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_Bologna University of Bologna].
[[Junior]] by [[Amir Ban]] and [[Shay Bushinsky]] did it again, also breaking the [[AMD|AMD 64]] dominance with the [[Intel]] [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intel_Core_%28microarchitecture%29 Core microarchitecture]. [[Shredder]] by [[Stefan Meyer-Kahlen]] and [[Rybka]] aka Rajlich by [[Vasik Rajlich]] a half point behind. Reigning champion [[Zappa]] played on a cluster with 512 nodes. Naturally, their fourth, and after the [[World Computer Chess Championship#RybkaDisqualification|Rybka disqualification]] in 2011, third place, did not met the expectations of [[Anthony Cozzie]] and [[:Category:Opening Book AuthorsAuthor|book author]] [[Erdogan Günes]].
=Final Standing=
=<span id="TheInterpretationOfRules"></span>The Interpretation of Rules=
[[Jaap van den Herik]] on the [[Lion]] case in ''The Interpretation of Rules'', [[ICGA Journal]], June 2006 <ref>[[Jaap van den Herik]] ('''2006'''). ''The Interpretation of Rules''. Editorial, [[ICGA Journal#29_2|ICGA Journal, Vol. 29, No. 2]], [http://ilk.uvt.nl/icga/journal/pdf/toc29-2.pdf pdf]</ref>:
 
The [[Lion|LION++ 1.5]] team made use of [[Fabien Letouzey|Fabien Letouzey’s]] program [[Fruit|FRUIT]]. FRUIT is composed from open-source software and it unexpectedly finished in a second place in the [[WCCC 2005|13th WCCC]] in Reykjavik, Iceland, last year. The LION++ 1.5 team members are honest people, they had checked our ruling with their legal advisors. It deals with rule 2 (see Vol. 29, No.1, p. 48) that states: “Each program must be the original work of the entering developers. Programming teams whose code is derived from or including game-playing code written by others must name all other authors, or the source of such code, in their application details. Programs which are discovered to be close derivatives of others (e.g., by playing nearly all moves the same), may be declared invalid by the Tournament Director after seeking expert advice. For this purpose a listing of all game-related code running on the system must be available on demand to the Tournament Director.”
 
In the tournament report you will find that one of the participants made a protest against LION++ 1.5. After inspection by [[Yngvi Björnsson]] and later (independently) by [[Jonathan Schaeffer]] it was clear that the code was similar to Letouzey’s. However, the remarkable thing was that the LION++ 1.5 team members did not deny this fact, but pointed: (a) to the credit for Letouzey as mentioned in their files, and (b) to all the newly developed routines which surrounded the ideas by Letouzey. Their interpretation of rule 2 diverged in three aspects from my interpretation. The aspects are: ('''1''') original work, ('''2''') application details, and ('''3''') close derivatives. I discuss the three points briefly below.
 
('''Ad 1''') “original work of the entering developers”. If they had included Fabien Letouzey (with his permission) in the list of authors, there would have been no concerns. Since they had not done so, the discussion was on “original work”. Clearly, the main part of the program LION++ 1.5 was not their original work. However, rule 2 had five more lines, which the team perceived as an explanation of the notion “original” (see ad 2 and ad 3).
=Time Underflow=
In the round 7 game, [[Crafty]] - [[IsiChess]], the latter took profit from the sportsmanship of Crafty [[:Category:Opening Book AuthorsAuthor|book author]] and operator [[Peter Berger]], and the decision of TD [[Jaap van den Herik]] to allow IsiChess author [[Gerd Isenberg]] to switch [[Pondering|ponder]] off and to push the space bar to force the move consistently displayed in the PV for about twenty minutes. Without that, IsiChess would have lost on time, but instead it even unjustly won the game from Crafty. Just after leaving the opening book while pondering, IsiChess displayed a huge average and maximum thinking time caused by a bug in [[Time Management|time calculation]] with a "negative" thinking time <ref>[https://www.game-ai-forum.org/icga-tournaments/round.php?tournament=16&round=7&id=5 Turin 2006 - Chess - Round 7 - Game 5 (ICGA Tournaments)]</ref>.
<pre>
[Event "WCCC 2006"]
* [http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsid=3277 How Deep Junior conquered Turin] by [[Shay Bushinsky]], [[ChessBase|ChessBase News]], August 07, 2006
* [http://www.shredderchess.com/chess-news/shredder-news/torino2006.html Shredder Computer Chess Download - Computer Chess World Championship in Torino] report by [[Stefan Meyer-Kahlen]]
* [httphttps://web.archive.org/web/20180713143608/https://www.schachclub-forchheim.de/aktuelles/archives/142-Johannes-Zwanzger-in-Turin-24.5..html Johannes Zwanzger in Turin], May 24, 2006 (German) ([https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wayback_Machine Wayback Machine]): [httphttps://web.archive.org/web/20180713143621/https://www.schachclub-forchheim.de/aktuelles/archives/144-Johannes-Zwanzger-in-Turin-25.5..html Johannes Zwanzger in Turin], May 25, 2006 (German) : [https://web.archive.org/web/20180713143618/http://www.schachclub-forchheim.de/aktuelles/archives/152-Johannes-Zwanzger-in-Turin-29.5..html Johannes Zwanzger in Turin], May 29, 2006 (German) : [httphttps://web.archive.org/web/20180713143627/https://www.schachclub-forchheim.de/aktuelles/archives/158-Johannes-Zwanzger-in-Turin-31.5..html Johannes Zwanzger in Turin], May 31, 2006 (German): [httphttps://web.archive.org/web/20180713143617/https://www.schachclub-forchheim.de/aktuelles/archives/160-Johannes-Zwanzger-in-Turin-1.6..html Johannes Zwanzger in Turin], June 01, 2006 (German)* [https://web.archive.org/web/20110901141642/http://vigo.altervista.org/WCCC_06.htm Pictorial Report from 14th WCCC, Torino 2006]([https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wayback_Machine Wayback Machine])
=References=
<references />
 
'''[[World Computer Chess Championship|Up one Level]]'''
[[Category:WCCC]]
[[Category:2006]]

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