Without doing a full international benchmarking exercise, I can tell you that we're generally familiar with how our foreign counterparts apply their competition laws and antitrust laws. Matters such as the issue at hand about diversity of voices typically would not fall in the realm of antitrust laws. Antitrust laws are generally an economic tool that really assesses rivalry between companies and how businesses and consumers benefit from that rivalry.
As my colleague tried to outline, we are largely focused on facts and evidence, rooted in how competition impacts price, innovation, and other non-price dimensions of competition and output. We would really have to focus on evidence of rivalry as it is, in a given industry. Diversity of voices and issues like that are not typically areas where you would necessarily see companies competing, or that would be taken into account in a competition analysis.