Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Thank you to our guests for being here. I appreciate it.
I am also on Twitter. As well, I am a member of Parliament who believes in the democratic process around the world, in the free flow of information and in freedom of expression. This is very important. It helps us improve our world and our planet, but at the same time, it raises some questions for me.
I've been listening to you from the beginning, and I have some concerns. I'm thinking of the role Twitter played when some regimes were challenged. It was a passive participation, but the free flow of information weakened some regimes. You are not the only ones, because there are other networks.
You have been very successful and you have been a victim of your own success. Given how much you have expanded, have you brought about mechanisms to protect yourself from people who are very disturbed by your very existence and who might engage in computer attacks? Of course, I am referring to what happened in January and May 2009 with regard to certain individuals. In that case, individuals were involved, but my question has to do with much bigger actors, who have a lot more money.
Do you want me to say it in English?