That is also how the legislative process works, and is likely how the Koreans got in to this mess in the first place. Experts at the time identified IE6 and ActiveX as dominating the market and standardised on them^. If the web had converged on IE and ActiveX it wouldn't look as stupid as it does now. Back at the time it was arguably clever, it only looked ill-advised if you were a free-market thinker.
^ The cynic in me cheerfully suggests the experts were probably endorsed by Microsoft, at the time a colossus on the net and world's most successful web browser purveyor. Hard to get better pedigree experts. All recommending that people commit hard to Microsoft technologies.
it would not be especially difficult to find a professor from a reputable university who would explain that using dynamically typed languages was malpractice, or that using the waterfall model was, or that using threads was, or that running the servers on microsoft windows was just fine, or that running virus scanners was useless, or that running virus scanners was essential and therefore it's malpractice to not run on an os that can run them, or that using crypto that had lost a nist competition was malpractice, or that unauthenticated rce security holes were unavoidable and the best you can do is to patch them quickly, or that you need to prove all your security-relevant code correct with coq or something before you ship it and therefore any security hole is malpractice, etc.
Your reasoning is extremely reductive – I can't tell if you're just trying to win an argument here. You could say people will be misleading about anything. Your doctor, the police, the DMV clerk. At some point, you have to recognize you live in a society, and society is built on some level of trust and fairness.
^ The cynic in me cheerfully suggests the experts were probably endorsed by Microsoft, at the time a colossus on the net and world's most successful web browser purveyor. Hard to get better pedigree experts. All recommending that people commit hard to Microsoft technologies.