I do see that as an improvement.
Look at the way the needle has moved on these laws. It started out in California with the lightest touch, which was a website statement confined to a couple of sectors and, frankly, it could have been written by anyone. It was the province of the marketing department, as often as not. Then, when companies were queried on the accuracy of the statement, the stock response was, “The guy who drafted this has left the company.”
The U.K. advanced that needle a bit by, one, applying this supply chain transparency statement requirement to all industries and, two, having directors sign off on it.
To your point, France has gone half a step farther and has put in that additional requirement. I think it's symptomatic of the way this issue is evolving in legislation around the world.