“…Theoretical predictions are ubiquitous, but testing and adjudicating between those predictions are challenging owing to the unique features of cyberspace (Gorwa and Smeets, 2019; Shore, 2022; Whyte, 2018). As Shandler and Canetti (2024) describe, ‘the [cyber] domain is complex, quality data is sparse, [and] affairs are shrouded in secrecy.’ To that end, recent work has attempted to quantify patterns in a number of important issue areas: cyber conflict and escalation (Kostyuk and Zhukov, 2019; Valeriano and Maness, 2015); strategy and capacity (Kostyuk, 2021; Valeriano et al, 2018); proxy warfare (Akoto, 2022; Borghard and Lonergan, 2016; Canfil, 2022; Herzog, 2011; Leal and Musgrave, 2022; Maurer, 2018a); psychology and decisionmaking (Gomez, 2019; Gomez and Whyte, 2022; Gomez and Villar, 2018; Hedgecock and Sukin, 2023; Kostyuk and Wayne, 2021; Shandler et al, 2021, 2022) and more. Despite this trend, the study of cyber norms has not received similar treatment.…”