I’d say it very clearly is mistrust, you mistrust the numbers, don’t you?
Again, you don't seem to be drawing a distinction between "mistrust" and "skepticism." What do
you think the difference is?
there is such a thing as taking something too far, there is healthy skepticism and then there are Flat Earthers…
Which isn't relevant here, since "they haven't shown us their data, so I'm not taking their conclusions at face value" is far and away different than "there's a vast conspiracy dedicated to feeding us false information for their own nefarious purposes!"
I do not consider yours a principled stance, but clearly we disagree on that.
If you don't think that not simply believing what you're told to believe, until there's evidence to support it, is a matter of principle then I don't know what to tell you.
yes, as a healthy level of skepticism and as what you are doing, these are not the same thing… that was the point
Your point is wrong. Saying "this company is reporting on the use of its own product, without showing how they reached their conclusions (and has already publicly admitted to at least one error in those conclusions), ergo I'm skeptical of their results" is entirely healthy.
"I'm going to believe what they tell us to believe, despite their having been wrong before, and a partisan interest in the results" is not.
oh well, so you have no data to base anything on, too bad,
When you have no data to base anything on, not making a conclusion (since that would be based on nothing) is not "too bad." It's the correct method of reasoning.
I will then continue to use the available data instead of basing it on your superior data or throwing my hands in the air and claiming ‘we have no data to base anything on’
Again, I'm not saying I have "superior data." I'm saying WotC hasn't shown
their data, so believing what they say is essentially taking their word on faith alone. I don't particularly care for faith-based stances, but you do you I guess.
until you have a better one, it is, unless your claim is not just that these numbers might be slightly off but that they are completely made up and intentionally misleading
Again, not having a better one doesn't mean that the existing one is any good. If I don't have a map of the Appalachian Trail, trying to navigate it via a map of the Grand Canyon isn't a good idea. Likewise, I've already replied to and disproven the "you're accusing them of being intentionally misleading" strawman, i.e. if someone has a partisan interest in the results they're reporting on, suspending judgment is simply prudent.
as a general principle I agree, there are cases where made up nonsense is worse than not knowing. Are you saying this is such a case, because that goes way beyond skepticism
Again, your point is that you should take WotC's results at "face value," apparently because there's nothing better. I'm saying that "there's nothing value" doesn't imbue their data with value, facial or otherwise. The map of the Grand Canyon doesn't become more helpful in navigating the Appalachian Trail just because it's the only map you have.