That is a very good question, Mrs. Gallant, because you can imagine that a hostile [Technical difficulty—Editor] social credit system for its 1.4 billion people would have the capabilities of building out that system for the rest of the global population. If I were a betting man, I would be saying that this particular country has already built out a fairly sophisticated profile on you, as well as your digital communications and your own data.
I think it is very critical that, precisely as you say, we think very carefully, for instance, about what sort of data we might inadvertently be sharing. Just very recently, Australia decided to pull tens of thousands of Chinese-made products out of government buildings and government networks out of concern about the sorts of surveillance capabilities they might pose.
Certainly quantum will be a significant leap. My best understanding, although this is not my area of expertise, is that it will be a bit like Big Blue. We are not going to go from one day to the next with this capability. There will be somewhat of an off-ramp, but certainly this is a future for which we need to prepare, because the encryption measures and mechanisms that we have in place today would not protect us in that future.