 Ms. Sleiman, the president can appoint aggressive enforcers. He can issue executive orders, which was great, but if we don't have the resources to take on the world's biggest companies, is it going to all work? Right. I think you're absolutely right, Madam Chairwoman. We need more funding for our antitrust enforcement agencies. Obviously that alone is not going to be sufficient, so I'm glad that you're working on a lot of other important pieces of the puzzle as well, but that's an important one that we ought to be able to get done. Okay, very good. And then we have not seen a lot of antitrust enforcement against mergers or anti-competitive conduct based on the issues raised by what this hearing has for the most part focused on, which is data. It's clear that big data does raise complex competition issues, but I'm doubtful that when you see some of these court cases recently that in my mind have gone in the wrong direction to begin with, but then we have this complex area of data and what that means for dominant carriers with no new laws or adjustment of laws. And that's why the Competition and Antitrust Law Enforcement Reform Act that I introduced with Senators Leahy, Lumethal Book and many others would update our laws. Could you talk about how this would help to address competition issues raised by big data? Yes, thank you so much, Madam Chairwoman. I think that's absolutely right. That recently, and not so recently, it's been going on for decades now that our antitrust laws have been narrowed and narrowed by these court decisions. And so now that we are facing the difficult challenges of big data, it's very difficult to bring a case, for example, where innovation harms are an important part of what the agencies are trying to argue. So I think it will be incredibly helpful to have your legislation in place that updates the legal standard, both for mergers and for exclusionary conduct. Exclusionary conduct in particular is how a lot of these big data concerns are happening. And it has really been difficult to bring exclusionary conduct cases, which is a broader problem beyond big data, but is particularly relevant here.