That is way to reductionist and binary to describe human behavior, sorry. People can be 'untrustworthy' when playing games and trustworthy in a life-threatening situation and the other way around. Pretty much nobody is almost or never trustworthy, it all depends on the context.
What this topic mostly shows is that griefing people in ED is a topic that is very, very important to you.
It isn't too reductionist at all. It wasn't an essay on the human condition. It still remains truth that - in the context of strangers playing a video game - strangers who one will almost certainly never meet except in this one video game world - that if an individual enters into an agreement that is a prerequisite for playing with others in a private group, and that individual reneges in their agreement (with forethought and prior planning) - that the individual in question cannot be trusted in any way, shape or form, in the context of playing that video game with other individuals.
It's a really exceptionally simple concept that I'm struggling to see that it can be "argued with", because, let's face facts, it can't be.
All this talk of military intelligence, pfft, nobody here probably has any clue what they're talking about or any form of first hand experience on which to base that. (It is highly, nee exceptionally likely that I might be the only one here who actually does, so let's not push it here.) Who here thinks it likely that a "double agent" is trusted 100% by the country or organisation that has placed them as a "mole"? That's right. Not entirely trustworthy, even by the side you are working primarily for...
Anyway, that nugget is beside the point. As is the notion that I might seem "upset". Irrelevant. Not at all sanguine to the discussion at hand.
My words describing (dishonest act => untrustworthy individual) are entirely devoid of emotional baggage. Instead, they are factual, honest and are nothing but reasoned logic.
On the topic of "infiltration", I do find it hilariously funny that some tried to focus on that word instead of confronting the main thrust of the point. It's just a word that I found "useful" in potentially getting views into the thread. On the notion of "infiltrating a pub", that's a very poor analogy. Unless the pub in question asks each individual, in person, whether they agree to not knife fight insude the pub, because all the other guests have agreed not to and are therefore not carrying knives or wearing blade-kevlar and the "infiltrator" is going into the pub with both a knife and Kevlar with the premeditated intention to knife as many other guests as is possible. Then, and only then do we have a valid "pub" infiltrator analogy and one that logically results in us all concluding that - that guy was definitely not trustworthy...
Slàinte Mhath
Mark H