Back to topic: in the
latest update from our friends at El Reg, the three and four letter agencies have backed the statements from Amazon, Apple etc. without actually addressing the accusations themselves. That said, Apple have pretty unambiguously denied the report.
So how did Bloomberg get it wrong? Assuming they
did get it wrong and these statements weren't written by people trying to avoid a stay in the basement of a nondescript building near Langley... here's a little work of fiction:
Say you're a three letter agency, your competitor is all over you, your budget is about to be cut... and you're an expert on information warfare. Say you hold a little soiree to describe an attack that's both highly plausible and almost impossible to prove. Say you have assets in major tech firms prepared to feed the lines you feed them. Is that enough to string a couple of journalists along, asking the right questions and never
quite having enough to publish? But the very fact they're questioning keeps the interest, and your budget, going.
If indeed the story started at a cosy infosec soiree hosted by a three letter agency, then the Bloomberg journalists will have done their job and started researching it. Each of these organisations is huge, with enough employees that it's statistically guaranteed to have a number of them in the pay of one or more three letter agency, as a side-gig.
Now say the elections come and go, and the new commander in chief of your entire military and intelligence structure happens to like picking fights with major trading partners, and has a stated policy of wanting to bring industry back home. Say said leader managed to get somebody who could talk in whole sentences to explain that it would be nice if some of these tech firms brought their work, their workers, their assembly lines and their IP home, to "make America great again." How much effort would it take to have a few more "disgruntled workers" in your pay to come forward and build a case?
So now you're feeding disinformation to legitimate journalists, who build a legitimate story and publish it through a well-respected outlet.
All of the above... I've made it up, it's bollocks. But vaguely plausible bollocks. It'll be interesting to see how the rest of this story plays out...