 I don't believe that the large social media companies are neutral. I just don't believe that. I can give you examples. I'll give you one personal example where on my Twitter account, I was getting 40,000 new users a day. And then I went to a girl who was raped in Delhi, a Dalit girl, and I went there and I did a protest. And magically, my Twitter users went to zero. They went from 40,000 a day to zero. We wrote to Twitter and said, what's going on? Please explain this to us. No answer. They said, we don't have the data. We don't understand this. We are checking. Three months later, we decided to get in touch with the Wall Street Journal. And we told the Wall Street Journal this. And a day before the Wall Street Journal article was coming out, they went back to 40,000. Yeah, that's interesting. That's my experience. Now, it's the same with WhatsApp. I don't believe that these are neutral platforms. Yeah. So what is to be done about them? For example, the head of Facebook has never met an Indian opposition leader. Yes. He comes. He meets the prime minister, goes home. I think the CEO of Facebook was a BJP person. In Delhi, yes. So why are we imagining that this thing is a neutral entity? It's not. No, I'm not saying that to you. But so the tech monopoly, if you look at the way Indian elections are being fought, they're essentially being fought on these platforms. Yeah, that's right. They've been fought on WhatsApp, they've been fought not so much on Twitter, but on WhatsApp and Facebook. Yeah. TikTok. TikTok's gone. Gone. Yes, I know. They were very important the last time. No, but this is very important. Yeah. TikTok's gone. Yes, exactly. Why is TikTok gone? Right? So the first level of monopoly is the media monopoly. I think what someone said, 140, 160 media entities are owned by one person. Yes. Right? So you have a media monopoly. And then you have multiple monopolies, business monopolies that provide finance to the DJP. Right? So that's what we're facing.