 We are focused on a declarative deterrence policy, where the president should stand up and say it is unacceptable no matter what happened in the past, going forward it is unacceptable to affect a United States election and all powers of the United States will be behind us if we do that. We recommend loan forgiveness programs and other ways to support students in getting into cybersecurity. One of the things I hear all the time when I talk to my corporate partners is that I have 30 jobs open or I can't find anyone to fill a particular post. And as a person who works at a fantastic university like Berkeley, we need to be at the forefront of that. So our organization is partnering with the School of Information and the College of Engineering here at Berkeley to develop a master's degree program, but that's only one small slice of the pie, and we need to do much better. And so providing incentives for students to enter this field can be really important. One of the suggestions we made was a public awareness campaign, really focused on comparing ourselves to the environment or to anti-smoking campaigns, to seatbelts, past public awareness campaigns that have really helped people take the invisible, see why it affects them, and do something about it. The average person hasn't seen any real financial or even known information loss through a cyber attack. They haven't had identity fraud or things like that. That could change very quickly, and so we're really trying to advocate for making people aware now before it's too late. We propose a cyber incubator out here in Silicon Valley where DC folks could be secunded to this institution as could people from the private sector for one to two-year stints where they get to know each other, where they have security clearances to work on common problems, but at the end, they go back to their old institutions and help really build that culture from the ground up. Right now, most cybersecurity research is done through DARPA, the defense agency dedicated to research and innovation. And in many ways, that's a great place for some of this. There have been some fantastic programs that have come out of that related to cybersecurity. But at the end of the day, what is going to be focused on in a defense organization is offensive and defensive capabilities for military purposes. And cybersecurity is so much more than that. It's a homeland security issue. It's an individual consumer issue. And so we need to invest research and resources into those angles as well. And so we propose a cyber specific research organization that could really help bring these issues along.