I was struggling with whether or not cyber-security is necessarily an IP law issue. Certainly from Microsoft's perspective, we have a group called the digital crimes unit, which spends all of its time investigating these sorts of international cyber-security breaches and taking down botnets that infect people's computers and turn them into spam-sending machines and those sorts of things. They've had some great successes there.
I believe that most of those successes have been centred on using U.S. law to take action against people who might somehow touch the United States in some ways and on being able to take down these networks by getting orders from the courts.
I can't tell you today whether we have similar laws in place that would permit that to happen, but I know it's a very big problem. As we are increasingly in an online world, it's a big problem for companies like Microsoft, and it's a big problem for governments. It's something we really need to work together on.
Certainly with the digital crimes unit in the U.S., our team's working with the FBI and with other groups to find where these—I don't know what the right word is—“black hats” are, and where their assets are, and where their computers are, and to put a stop to the things they're doing to interfere with the flow of data and that sort of thing.