 All right. This content moderation is a story we talked about a few months ago. California passed a law that basically requires all social media companies that active in the state, which means all social media companies, with a sizeable gross annual revenue, basically all the major players. They have to issue semi-annual reports that describe their content moderation policies and provide data on the number of objectionable posts and how they were addressed. So they have to report to the government how this works. Twitter sued California in the US District Court for infringement of the First Amendment, infringement of the freedom of speech, and tried to get this law overturned. A judge has just come back in an eight-page decision, dismissed Twitter, and basically upheld the regulations. He says, quote, while the reporting requirement does not appear to place a substantial compliance burden on social media companies, it does not appear that the requirement is unjustified or unduly burdensome within the context of the First Amendment. So who knew that the First Amendment had to withstand the unduly burdensome requirement? And who knew that the First Amendment could be violated if it was, quote, according to some judge, some way unjustified? I mean, this is just an expression of the complete corruption of our legal system, of our laws, and a lack of understanding of the First Amendment, but a lack of understanding of individual rights per se. And of course, in a true understanding of the Constitution and a proper understanding of individual rights, 90% of the laws and the books would be thrown out, including this one. So Elon Musk and Twitter have lost this one. It'll be interesting to see if they appeal. It'll be interesting to see if an appeal like this goes to the Supreme Court ultimately. Under First Amendment, with the First Amendment argument, we will see. We'll see if this is something Elon Musk wants to spend a lot of money on, or if he just wants to spend the money on establishing these guidelines and issuing this semi-annual, is it an annual report? Semi-annual report to everybody. We will see. We will see.