 Mr. Zuckerberg was just stunned by the ferocity and the logic, I think, of Holly's questioning. And he was a dear in the headlights look, but I've never seen a dear in the headlights stand up, turn towards you and apologize, which he did to the audience at Holly's urging. It's a remarkable moment. It felt historic, but at the same time, number one, he had to be shamed into it. Number two, there was no admission to fault. And number three, it's meaningless if nothing changes. Holly used their own stats at Metta against them. He said, number one, 37% of girls ages 13 to 15 experienced unwanted nudity in the past week. 24% unwanted sexual advances and 17% self-harm content. And this week at Holly's request, the Senate took up by unanimous consent whether to pass a bill allowing people victimized by this material online to sue. And it was blocked by Senator Ron Leiden of Oregon, so it went nowhere.