It’s not difficult to try. I believe it would be difficult to succeed (or even not get easily caught) because the evidence exists in too many third-party hands outside the organization’s custody and control. Thus, absent special circumstances, it is very unlikely an organization would even try; the difficulty of success would deter them.
(I meant “risk” to refer more to the consequences of being caught—that it would pose a grave risk to the organization’s continued existence, and to the careers of those who attempted the tampering.)
It’s not difficult to try. I believe it would be difficult to succeed (or even not get easily caught) because the evidence exists in too many third-party hands outside the organization’s custody and control. Thus, absent special circumstances, it is very unlikely an organization would even try; the difficulty of success would deter them.
(I meant “risk” to refer more to the consequences of being caught—that it would pose a grave risk to the organization’s continued existence, and to the careers of those who attempted the tampering.)