Thank you very much, and it's great that you could be here today.
When we were in Washington, we had an opportunity to speak with the FTC, as Scott just mentioned, but also with some people who talked about the concept of privacy and perhaps looked at it in ways that not everyone has uppermost in their minds. They were talking about privacy versus fairness, inaccurate information being presented about oneself; seclusion, the right to be left alone; security, making sure that private information about your home and your family and so on is kept out of the media; liberty, the opportunity to be able to decide for yourself what you are going to be doing; and basic dignity.
These are the kinds of lenses that some of the people we were talking to asked us to consider, or at least keep in mind as we go through this particular study, because it is not one that is going on in different parts of the world.
How do you reconcile the use of your platform with some of the abuses of privacy, with some of those things that I've just outlined? Do you look at it a little differently for each of those aspects of privacy? Could you comment on that, please?