Okay.
I notice in the U.K. in 2014 Google's tax was less than $7,000, which is about the average that a U.K. worker pays, and yet you paid out $534 million in bonuses. Your level playing field around the world works pretty well for you.
I want to get into this question about Google's philosophy. I was a big Google believer. When you guys started out I thought this was really awesome. I met Google in New York. I loved that philosophy, “Don't be evil”, but your founder also said that the Google policy on a lot of things is “to get right up to the creepy line and not cross it”.
Can we trust you to decide what's okay creepy, what's too creepy, and what's downright evil, when you're facing a class action lawsuit for illegal data collection? By using the loophole on the iPhone, you've been accused of tracking citizens in real time without their consent. You're facing charges in multiple states. Now there's a complaint about collecting personal information on children under 13 without their parental consent, including location, device identifiers, phone numbers, and their use across different websites. Rather than trusting you to decide what's creepy, shouldn't we just have legislation?