Noll and Patterson (and Freeman) are interesting purely because they were taken seriously, put themselves forward, and because of the fact they were given a pass solely because they were perceived to be believer-friendly.
None of that applies here: The hoaxer has not been taken seriously (or is claimed not to have been taken seriously); has not shown a desire to place themselves front and centre, and has not been given a pass (if only because someone believes they found a connection to a known-skeptic).
Nobody knew of Wallace or Dickens for years (until they chose to show their hands). And nobody cared. They were doing their own thing in private for their own amusement, partly assuming that nobody else really took their stuff seriously, either -- or at least shouldn't. That seems the much more pertinent analogy for this instance, no?
You can't fake signal. In the context of this torturous analogy, by definition, fakes are noise. The existence of noise has no bearing on the existence of a discernible signal; it is orthogonal to and independent of it. As such your implication is both misplaced and the result of misunderstanding.
I see where I mixed that up. Thx for the clarification.
So. You don't think having researchers spending time on (wasting time) identifying noise is a hinderence on 'real' evidence gathering?