If your goal is not to be seen, relying on things without meaningful market share is actually fine.
Security through obscurity is bad long-term, comprehensive strategy because it's unstable and not indefatigable... Not because it doesn't work in the short run and in one-off cases.
>If your goal is not to be seen, relying on things without meaningful market share is actually fine.
Except for the cases where you want the exact opposite, because the noise makes it more difficult to find a single person. If there's only 5 people using, say, TOR Browser - you become easy to track.
Not saying this is the case here, just that different situations require different operational security considerations.
Security through obscurity is bad long-term, comprehensive strategy because it's unstable and not indefatigable... Not because it doesn't work in the short run and in one-off cases.