 I live in San Diego, and I understand both technology and health care well enough to navigate in a fairly savvy way. And in San Diego, I have all my three primary health care vendors, my pharmacy chain and the two different hospital systems, all use the same platform for their electronic health record, and I know all the actions I have to take to make everybody know that I've had a flu shot every single year. And yet, the fact that I even have to take an action and that's not automatic is a little weird, but okay, in the interest of HIPAA and data privacy, maybe that's appropriate. But then when I send that information, it requires medical professionals on the other end to sort of accept that that information is there. And that's a lot of work for a lot of people, and I'm the ideal scenario where everybody's on the same platform, I'm healthy enough to navigate, I'm knowledgeable enough to navigate, I'm tech literate enough to navigate, and it's not working. It's my data, right? I mean, that's like a pretty fundamental right, that I'm receiving health care. I have all this information, some of which I may not be really qualified to interpret. So it's really important I be able to pick it up and take it to the next place and share it there as my care continues, as I age, as life goes on. And the fact that I can't do that, that I can't make that choice, that I don't own this really important data about me is strange. I'm out for free market capitalism, but not if it's going to hurt people. My core message is, if I can't do it in San Diego with all the stars lined, then it doesn't work.