Thank you for that question.
There is no doubt that there is a broad range of players, and the supply chain is quite extensive. If you go back to the uppermost level, it definitely includes designers. How we've structured the general prohibition in a statute is by refocusing the emphasis on creating that safety net again, to deal with products that may not have specific requirements or a specific regulation, to take into consideration safe design, to know what you're using in your products, and to consider their reasonable and foreseeable use.
As per some of my earlier remarks, we do understand and appreciate that we need to give practical tools and guidance to industry in the way of handbooks, guidance documents, and policies. There are a lot of international standards in place, as well, that we would be leveraging. I indicated as an example the ISO/PC 243 standard, which does take that broad look at consumer product safety--to factor in design, to factor in manufacturing protocols, and to look at quality assurance. All of these things have been built in and will continue to be built as part of the broader framework of the legislation.