Thank you.
It's an enormous question, but it's the money question.
I will keep it brief and state that it's crucial that government play a role, because thus far we've mostly relied on corporate self-governance and it hasn't worked. I mean, we're seeing all kinds of harms happen online.
What we do need is a regulator, because a regulator can be more agile in dealing with this. It's too cumbersome for some of these concerns to work through the courts. We need help to sort of set practices. Each platform is different, so the platforms really do need to come up with solutions for their spaces. It's just that there needs to be a method to hold them accountable for it. They need to demonstrate to some regulator the steps they're taking to protect children.
I think we need to divvy up the harms. If you're talking about specific child protection measures—looking at child sexual abuse images, intimate image abuse, trafficking—these are crimes, and there are the primary actors who, to the extent they can be found and prosecuted, should be the targets, but there is a separate responsibility and special duties that should exist for platforms.
When it comes to child—