I would only add that we should look to Europe. We should look to the Digital Services Act. It is very effective in Europe—I wouldn't say “very effective”; it is effective. It is a step in the right direction. Europe is making progress in terms of holding these social media companies to account, specifically for the content that's posted on their sites. We need to basically replicate that in this country.
We should also look to our European allies like Finland, which has done an extremely good job of ensuring that future generations do have the digital media literacy skills they need in order to enable that sort of critical thinking. They inject digital media literacy into every course in every year within the school curriculum. It's not just one course a year or one class a year; it's throughout the entire education of a child, from kindergarten to high school. They are learning about digital media literacy. This is something that we should also be doing. We need to start disrupting these sorts of activities, especially when it comes to foreign influence and information operations. We need to figure out ways to disrupt these activities.
Our European allies are doing this. We need to look to them again and learn from them how they're doing it and replicate those efforts here. If we're not disrupting these operations, if we're not holding to account those who are collaborating with these foreign regimes, then we're not going to move towards deterrence of them.
Those are my three points.