 To our system in the U.S., we see the Digital Media and Copyright Act and the Electronic Effect Act. We have no idea what's coming under ACT-UP now in terms of the international trade type constraints on requirements to regulate at the logical layer in order to protect digital rights at the top, very, very large risk. And then in platforms, right, cloud services, search. We don't know, at the moment, there are concerns. The critical thing to understand is the same set of concerns is there. Which of these, in which direction, each of these platforms will end up more closed and requiring intervention or continuously open and not, that's a critical question. So cloud computing, cheap and easy to deploy and grow, fantastic. But what if the standards aren't set, what if it's not open, what if somebody gets to control, that becomes a next potential platform that needs to be looked at. And that at the moment, the basic point is we need to preserve the same perspective on it. Which is to say, it has to be open, data has to be portable, there have to be standards, and we need to make sure that there's no single point of control that ends up actually being controlled. That's the set of questions that are raised. As we're moving from these relatively open platforms to a new set of platforms that are providing some of the same functionality, making some things easier, but others not. The only thing I will say on standards, the only thing I will say on standards is IP rights. To the extent that reasonable and non-discriminatory rates are too high, that's not good enough in terms of genuinely decentralized innovation that anybody can play. They have to be free, it's supposed to, just reasonable and non-discriminatory. Free as in beer, not free as in speech, they have to be free or at least very low cost in some form or another, otherwise we lose some players. And I'll skip human expression and communications, although that gets replicated when we're talking about copyright and things like that. Essentially what we're seeing is a tension between models based on control, stabilization, optimization, and models based on rapid evolution, experimentation, failure, and adaptation. We're seeing political battles between 20th century controlled based business models, Hollywood and the recording industry particularly pushing them, and 21st century players, both commercial players and social actors. And then let me spend one minute just highlighting a few points on the digital agenda. The first thing, because I'm about to make particular criticism.