Over the past few years, there has been a lot of progress in this area, especially in rural areas, where there has been lots of Internet testing, because official data about access.... They say that this many people or this percentage of the population has access to 50/10 megabit-per-second packages that you see in the universal service debates. Those are all based on advertised speeds. Areas that advertise speeds higher than that benchmark are not eligible for funding. Therefore, a lot of rural communities have been doing their own speed tests or community testing, using different platforms to better understand it.
There has been quite a bit of progress on that. People know when they're not getting the speeds they're paying for. Nothing is a problem as long as it's working; everybody has knowledge when they're not getting what they're paying for.