First off, you are correct in saying that the performance benchmark was carried out by competitors of the WSO2ESB product line. There are a couple of observations masquerading as corruption issues, but only half of this may have any merit. The issue related to XSLT corruption is an erroneous conclusion, the tested configuration was missing semantics and errors resulting from this cannot be attributed to message corruption.
The issue in question related to corruption of messages larger than 16K was only a problem with a non-default customised configuration that enabled a feature known as Streaming XPath, which is used to enhance performance in XPath scenarios. While there was a real issue here, this was never a default configuration and has not really affected the thousands of real deployments of WSO2 ESB out there. Streaming XPath was stabilised in the recently released WSO2ESB 4.8.0. The WSO2 ESB continues to be the fastest open source ESB. Case studies like: http://wso2.com/casestudies/ebay-uses-100-open-source-wso2-esb-to-process-more-than-1-billion-transactions-per-day/ show WSO2 ESB's worth in high volume and high performance scenarios.