Thank you very much.
I think there is a whole host.
The first, as I said, is about looking broadly at international relations to try to predict which countries are going to engage in this. This is probably much cheaper than some other modes of foreign interference. We need to be on the lookout for that, using our international-relations hat.
The second is about being on the lookout for how new technologies get used. There are stories of the Germans seizing on a new technology, whereas others, like the British, were relying on older technologies and didn't see it coming to a certain extent. We need to be forward-thinking in that regard.
The third lesson is that there's a lot we can do. We're not powerless in this regard. We have faced similar situations before with new technology, so we shouldn't just throw up our hands and say, “The Internet and generative AI are unprecedented, so there's nothing we can do.” There's actually a lot that has precedent. We can look at examples of how we've tried to deal with this before, in order to see what's worked and what hasn't.