Sure. I have a couple of comments.
First off, we have abided by the additional sanctions that have been added on Russian names since the terrible invasion of Ukraine. We are of course ensuring that we are doing everything we can to prevent our platform from being used as a means of illegal financing of that war or a place for Russian oligarchs to hide their money.
We actually see cryptocurrency having a positive impact in this conflict, in that there are people around the world who are donating directly to the Ukrainian government using cryptocurrency as a means of doing so. Dustin mentioned that journalists operating in Russia, reporting from within Russia on that regime, sometimes need external ways to be funded and supported in their investigative work. Cryptocurrency has a place in those sorts of repressive regimes.
I also would comment more broadly on the trillion-dollar figure you mentioned. I don't know this for sure, but that would effectively be half of the total market value of all cryptocurrencies. We have high confidence that this money is not being stored in cryptocurrency. I think some recent studies by U.S. foreign services and security services would show that cryptocurrency is not of a size or magnitude that it can be an effective tool for hiding billions or trillions of dollars. The traditional finance system and the role of offshore banks and offshore shell companies still dwarf the size of the cryptocurrency industry. It is important to make sure that we keep that in context when evaluating how crypto could be used for negative purposes.