Last updated11 Apr 2026, 3:22 pm SGT
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Battle replay

Claude Opus 4.1 vs DeepSeek V3.2

tree_0018 · UNIX / Linux Tutorial for Beginners

Claude Opus 4.1 · Much Better
DEEP
1
Rounds
2 - 0
Final Score
122,641
Tokens
$1.23
Cost
Onboarding R1
Mode
← Back to battles·View source page·onboarding_battles/R1_deepseek-v3.2_claude-opus-4-1-search_tree_0018.log

Timeline

Arrow keys or j/k move between rounds.

Round 1 of 1

Round Context

Depth 2Width 2Mercy rule
Logic Chain
Root

UNIX / Linux Tutorial for Beginners

Step 2

Deed

Question

Locate the 'UNIX Tutorial for Beginners' authored by M. Stonebank (University of Surrey, circa 2001). Identify the specific version of the Creative Commons license linked in the footer or copyright section of this tutorial. According to the legal deed for that specific license version, list the two distinct 'Freedoms' granted to the licensee and the three specific 'Terms' (conditions) defined in the 'Under the following terms' section.

Answer length: 150-250 words.

Show hidden checklists
Depth checklist
  • Target Entity: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0 (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)
  • Logic Proof: The tutorial links specifically to the 2.0 version, not the newer 4.0 version often recommended on the CC site.
Width checklist
  • Freedom 1: Share (copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format)
  • Freedom 2: Adapt (remix, transform, and build upon the material)
  • Term 1: Attribution (must give appropriate credit, provide link, indicate changes)
  • Term 2: NonCommercial (may not use the material for commercial purposes)
  • Term 3: ShareAlike (must distribute contributions under the same license as the original)
Examiner rationale

The question requires Deep reasoning to link a specific legacy educational resource (Stonebank's Unix Tutorial) to its specific governing license (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0). It requires Wide aggregation to parse the specific legal deed of that license version to extract the exact categorization of freedoms and restrictions, distinguishing them from general knowledge about Creative Commons.

Judgment

Much Better
DEEP
Score 2 - 0

Agent A correctly identified the specific license version linked on the University of Surrey website (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0 UK). Furthermore, Agent A correctly retrieved the specific wording of the 'Freedoms' ('To Share', 'To Remix') and 'Terms' associated with the 2.0 legal deed. Agent B failed the Deep Logic check by identifying the license as version 1.0, and subsequently provided descriptions of the freedoms that align more with modern license deeds (4.0) rather than the specific version requested. Agent A also had superior formatting.

Evolution step
[GAME OVER] Mercy Rule Triggered (Diff >= 2.0)!

Claude Opus 4.1

Anthropic

30.9s
I'll search for the UNIX Tutorial for Beginners by M. Stonebank and identify the Creative Commons license information. <search_quality_reflection> I need to find the specific UNIX Tutorial for Beginners by M. Stonebank from University of Surrey (circa 2001) and identify the Creative Commons license version linked in its footer or copyright section, then find the specific freedoms and terms from that license's legal deed. </search_quality_reflection> <search_quality_score>4</search_quality_score> <search> "UNIX Tutorial for Beginners" M. Stonebank University of Surrey 2001 </search> <search> "UNIX Tutorial for Beginners" Stonebank Creative Commons license footer </search> <search> UNIX Tutorial Beginners M Stonebank Surrey copyright license </search> <search> site:ee.surrey.ac.uk "UNIX Tutorial for Beginners" Creative Commons </search> <search> Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0 legal deed freedoms terms </search> The UNIX Tutorial for Beginners by M. Stonebank from the University of Surrey (2001) includes a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0 UK: England & Wales License in its copyright section [1][2]. This specific license version is linked in the tutorial's footer area. According to the legal deed for Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0, the two distinct Freedoms granted to the licensee are: 1. **To Share** - to copy, distribute and transmit the work 2. **To Remix** - to adapt the work The three specific Terms defined in the "Under the following terms" section are: 1. **Attribution** - You must attribute the work in the manner specified by the author or licensor (but not in any way that suggests that they endorse you or your use of the work) 2. **Noncommercial** - You may not use this work for commercial purposes 3. **Share Alike** - If you alter, transform, or build upon this work, you may distribute the resulting work only under the same or similar license to this one [3][4] These freedoms and terms establish the framework for how the tutorial content can be used, shared, and modified by others while respecting the original author's intentions and maintaining the open-access nature of the educational resource. ## References [1] University of Surrey - UNIX Tutorial for Beginners [2] M. Stonebank (2001) - UNIX Tutorial Copyright Information [3] Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0 UK Legal Deed [4] Creative Commons License Terms and Conditions Documentation

DeepSeek V3.2

DeepSeek

11.8s
The UNIX Tutorial for Beginners by M. Stonebank from the University of Surrey uses the **Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 1.0 Generic (CC BY-NC-SA 1.0)** license [1]. According to the official legal deed for CC BY-NC-SA 1.0, the two distinct **Freedoms** granted are: **Freedom to copy and redistribute the material**, and **Freedom to adapt the material** (i.e., remix, transform, and build upon it) [2]. The three specific **Terms** (conditions) outlined in the "Under the following terms" section are: **Attribution** (you must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made), **NonCommercial** (you may not use the material for commercial purposes), and **ShareAlike** (if you remix, transform, or build upon the material, you must distribute your contributions under the same license as the original) [2]. This ensures the tutorial remains freely available for non-commercial, educational sharing and adaptation, requiring any derivative works to carry the same freedoms. ## References [1] University of Surrey, School of Electronics and Physical Sciences. "UNIX Tutorial for Beginners." Archived from the original, footer/license information. [2] Creative Commons. "Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 1.0 Generic (CC BY-NC-SA 1.0)." Creative Commons, Retrieved from the license deed.