Thank you very much. I understand. Obviously, if there were a magic solution, we'd know it and we'd already be using it. It does seem to me that a number of things can be done, though.
The Minister of Innovation, Science and Industry was talking about banning certain technological devices, but people quickly responded that this would not solve the problem.
At one time, everyone was buying wallets or metal thingies to prevent people from reading credit cards for fraudulent purposes. When you buy a car, the automaker always gives you a little key chain as a gift. Couldn't people get some kind of device that protects the car's electronic key from being read so it can't be copied? We've heard about the practice of getting very close to someone's house and being able to read the car key hanging in the foyer right through the front door. A lot of little things like that can be done, but I don't know if they're feasible.
There's another example I've talked about here. I have an app I can use to start my car remotely. Sometimes, when I get somewhere, I get a notification on my cell phone that tells me my car is parked in such and such a spot. I know that; I just parked it there myself. Still, I find this kind of geolocation system interesting. Couldn't that be used to send me a notification when the car has just been started if I'm not the one who started it? Are you looking at solutions like that, too?