You're the only one talking about Tesla in this situation. I never mentioned Tesla's reluctance to release data. That's your fabrication.
I'm talking about data that's incapable of being analyzed in a meaningful way without contextual / proprietary knowledge of how that data was created, is used, and is stored. In reality, I'd wager that most companies have more of that type of data than not.
My mistake, I see that your initial post was asking this speculative question. The first response to you shifted the topic to "What does Tesla have to hide?", which seems reasonable given the topic of the submitted article, but that wasn't in your original question.
I'm talking about data that's incapable of being analyzed in a meaningful way without contextual / proprietary knowledge of how that data was created, is used, and is stored. In reality, I'd wager that most companies have more of that type of data than not.