| There is no supporting evidence for the assertion that it was "Russia" or about the nature of the "hacking groups". There is also no consideration of the possibility of false attribution of the above. Suppose I see that an enemy wears size 10.5 Adidas sneakers. If I buy an identical pair and leave muddy footprints with them near a crime scene, does the presence of the footprints implicate my adversary? In the case of hacking, our assessment must include a notion of how easy it would be for a nation or group to be falsely implicated. Separately, there must be a discussion of motive apart from specific evidence. But what we're seeing is a blurring together of various tiny pieces of data, analysis, guesswork, etc., into a narrative. Within intelligence circles such narratives are meant to be used to allow higher order analysis to proceed in the absence of low level proof. This is useful in the same way that imagining Travis Kalanick as a misogynist is useful in assessing the question of how such a trait might have impacted corporate culture, but it does not follow that it's true just because one lower-level incident occurred, etc. |
> Separately, there must be a discussion of motive apart from specific evidence. But what we're seeing is a blurring together of various tiny pieces of data, analysis, guesswork, etc., into a narrative.
Do you believe that the intelligence community has failed to consider these fairly obvious principles when producing their reports?
It seems you've constructed a belief system by which you can never be convinced of Russia's involvement. This is what I was getting at with my question above (which you didn't really answer).