 Mr. Pichai, I have not really liked your response to the lawsuit and what's been happening. I think we need a change in competition policy for this country. I hope I'll be able to ask you more about it at the Judiciary Committee. And I think your response isn't just offensive, it's been defiant to the Justice Department and suits all over the world. You control almost 90% of all general search engine queries, 70% of the search advertising market. Don't you see these practices as anti-competitive? Senator, we are a popular general-purpose search engine. We do see robust competition in many categories of information. And we invest significantly in R&D. We are innovating. We are lowering prices in all the markets we are operating. And happy to engage and discuss it further. Well, one of your employees testified before the Antitrust Subcommittee last month. And he suggested that Google wasn't dominant in ad tech, that it was only one of many companies in a highly competitive ad tech landscape. Google has 90% of the publisher ad server market, a product of its double-click acquisition. Does the market sound highly competitive to you when you have 90% of it? Very brief answer. Many publishers can use simultaneously many tools. Amazon and trade desk alone have grown significantly in the last two years. This is a market in which we share a majority of our revenue. Our margins are low. We are happy to take feedback here. We are trying to support the publishing industry, but definitely open to feedback and happy to engage and discuss it further. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. President. I think you've gotten feedback from the boss. So I'm looking forward to our next hearing to discuss it more. Thank you.