Using information acquired from other individuals (social information use) is ubiquitous in animals and not restricted to withinspecies context. Some of the textbook examples of interspecific information use in the wild has been provided using apparent novel niche experiment approach, with migratory flycatcher species (Ficedula spp.) cueing on apparent nest site preferences (geometric symbols) and clutch sizes of resident great tits (Parus major) and blue tits (Cyanistes caeruleus) to choose their own nest site. However, the interpretation of these results has recently been challenged. It has been argued that there is no evidence that flycatchers visit tit nests to collect information about clutch size or that flycatchers are capable of Bcounting^tit eggs. Instead, it has been proposed that the decision-making patterns of flycatchers found in earlier studies resulted from aggressive interactions, not information use, between tits and flycatchers (termed owner aggression hypothesis). Here, I contribute to the debate around both hypotheses and specifically explore the remaining points of disagreement, related to the timing of flycatchers prospecting and the cognitive abilities needed to assess tit clutch size. I argue how interannual variation in phenology can explain the apparent discrepancy between the observed and predicted timing of flycatchers prospecting. I also argue why assessing tit clutch size neither requires Bcounting^eggs nor any sophisticated cognitive capacities. Finally, I propose experimental designs to test the hypotheses on the underlying mechanisms explaining the observed patterns, which will allow taking further leaps in resolving the selective interspecific information use vs. owner aggression hypothesis dilemma.