Slagsvold and Wiebe (2017) criticize part of the literature on heterospecific information use, coined the interspecific cue hypothesis (ICH), which use geometric symbols to study whether flycatchers copy or reject the apparent choices of tits (Seppänen and Forsman 2007, Forsman et al. 2012, Loukola et al. 2013, Jaakkonen et al. 2015. They claim that some of the heterospecific social information use patterns in flycatchers as revealed by these apparent novel niche experiments (ANNE) can instead be explained by tit aggression. They introduce the owner aggression hypothesis (OAH), which proposes that tits aggressively defend alternative nest boxes, which may better explain the patterns that were previously interpreted as heterospecific information use. Slagsvold and Wiebe (2017) present the number of assumptions of the OAH as smaller than that of the ICH, essentially claiming that this provides a more parsimonious explanation for the patterns observed in the ICH literature. Although the owner aggression hypothesis is interesting and needs to be tested, there are still a number of patterns in the heterospecific information use literature that cannot be explained by tit aggression. Moreover, I do not agree with some of the arguments used to reject the ICH, and the number of assumptions of the OAH may be higher than claimed in the paper, undermining the claim that it is more parsimonious than the ICH.Tits and flycatchers share many resources in the same environment, from nesting holes to food sources like caterpillars. They also have common threats including aerial predators like sparrow hawks Accipiter nisus and nest predators like pine martens Martes martes among others. Considering the degree of niche overlap, it would be surprising if the later breeding migratory flycatchers should not use information from the presence of the earlier breeding resident tits. Moreover, tits spend the entire year in (the vicinity of ) the breeding grounds, in contrast to flycatchers, which spend the winter in Africa and can benefit from social information provided by the better informed tits. There is ample evidence that flycatchers use the information of tits in their settlement and reproductive decisions (Kivelä et al. 2014, Jaakkonen et al. 2015, Samplonius and Both 2017. Experiments with the apparent copying or rejection of geometric symbols (Seppänen and Forsman 2007, Seppänen et al.