It's probably more about convention and terminology. Security researchers tend to label foreign actors as APTs partly for tracking and reporting purposes. With domestic agencies, especially US ones, there's either reluctance or it's treated as a given.
It is perspective. From the Iranian stance, NSA is an APT and theirs is not. Likewise the UK version, Russian versions etc.
Them / Us.
It's probably more about convention and terminology. Security researchers tend to label foreign actors as APTs partly for tracking and reporting purposes. With domestic agencies, especially US ones, there's either reluctance or it's treated as a given.
Because it's not wrong when "we" (i.e. those naming who counts as APT) are doing it.
Sure they are. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equation_Group
Remember the Snowden leaks? They are.
WTF is an APT?
Advanced Persistent Threat. It's a cyber security term.
Thanks. Well that answers the question. Opponents are threats, your tools to counter are not.
As in: Your gun is a threat to me, my gun is how I defend against YOUR gun.