Usually with simple hypotheses I will have something like
$$H_0: \beta_1 = 0 | H_A: \beta_1 \ne 0$$
But suppose I have a null hypotheis
$$H_0: \beta_1 = \beta_2 = \beta_3 = 0$$
Question
What is the alternative hypothesis? Is there an assumed one or could there be multiple plausible one's and it is up to the tester to specify?
My econometrics professor is super hand wavy and just said $\text{Not} H_0$ was the alternate. But that seems ridiculous to me.
Possibility 1:
$$H_A: \beta_1 = \beta_2 = \beta_3 \ne 0$$ Possibility 2:
$$H_A: \beta_1 \ne 0, \beta_2 \ne 0, \beta_3 \ne 0$$
There are obviously more possibilities, but these are enough to illustrate my point.
But these are like completely different statements. Does this mean I have to specify the alternate hypothesis and there isn't a given/assumed one unlike simple hypotheses? Does this just mean my professor did a bad job?