Certainly. I would be happy to.
Let me first clarify a bit about what I was getting at in saying that we didn't want it to be only a privacy tool. As my privacy team works to build privacy tools and to build transparency and control into all of Google's products, one of the things we're very aware of is that there's very often a valid critique that these settings and options for users are buried underneath a privacy link or a privacy option where nobody ever actually goes.
We wanted to be ambitious about addressing that problem by making the dashboard as much as possible a place where people would simply go to see all the information in their account for all kinds of reasons: because they're looking for something or because it's useful to them in other ways. By doing that, it would keep them informed about the information, about the data that was in all the different Google services they might have used over time.
It would keep them informed about which services they might have used at one time, then forgotten about and never gone back to again, but that still have some of their data. They would be informed in this way even if they never had that moment of thinking that they should check on their privacy. We felt that was a way for us to reach, to protect, and to better serve more of our users, even if they weren't necessarily people who were already very conscious of privacy as a question.