Thank you very much for the question.
It is the case that we don't sell facial recognition to local police in the U.S. I think our position is that it's really important to get law in place that can protect human rights in the context of facial recognition. I think one of the challenges in the U.S. is that there is no law on that front. There isn't any privacy law, the type of privacy law that you have in a lot of other countries, including in Canada, although I'm aware of ongoing conversations around how the privacy framework in Canada can be improved and that they are important conversations to have as well.
That's our position. That's why we're using our voice proactively, to attend conversations like this and contribute to important work like this to make sure that we can get in place some robust regulation for the use of facial recognition, with particular urgency around police and more broadly to make sure that the technology is being used in a way that is transparent, accountable and rights-protecting.