Yes, but that’s not the way the problem goes. You don’t fix your prior in response to the evidence in order to force the conclusion (if you’re doing it anything like right). So different people with different priors will have different amounts of evidence required: 1 bit of evidence for every bit of prior odds against, to bring it up to even odds, and then a few more to reach it as a (tentative, as always) conclusion.
But what exactly constitutes “enough data”? With any finite amount of data, couldn’t it be cancelled out if your prior probability is small enough?
Yes, but that’s not the way the problem goes. You don’t fix your prior in response to the evidence in order to force the conclusion (if you’re doing it anything like right). So different people with different priors will have different amounts of evidence required: 1 bit of evidence for every bit of prior odds against, to bring it up to even odds, and then a few more to reach it as a (tentative, as always) conclusion.