That's exactly right.
I think you need to look at the incentives here and what kind of system they produce. Our colleague, Ms. Lovrics here, is concerned about overly broad consumer rights that could be used outside of repair purposes. Maybe there's an opportunity to tighten a little bit of the language to be very clear that we're talking about repair here.
However, we also need to not give manufacturers an overly broad opportunity to deny access to consumers and to our repair agents. We now know across a very broad range of sectors that many of them will choose to freeze people out of basic, reasonable repair rights in telecommunications, in autos and in farm equipment. The more these digital technologies enable software lockouts in more and more devices, the more broadly this will affect our culture, and the more we consumers will find ourselves surrounded by things we don't really control and with no ability to step in and take the action we need to.