We are following developments at the international level, absolutely. The government does not deny that there is a lot of movement in this area.
Again, our reading of the issue is that the technology has not necessarily reached maturity. Internationally, Australia and France are still looking at these issues. The French are in the process of testing some solutions, but they have not yet completed their work. In the United States, as you pointed out, infrastructure needs to be put in place. Louisiana lawmakers introduced verification measures to block access to minors. Other American states have proposed similar legislation, but we see that some services have withdrawn their access in those states because there is still no infrastructure in place.
Clearly, a number of solutions are possible. I'm thinking in particular of security tokens, where age verification is done by a third party. As you mentioned, we can also look at device verification. Another solution is facial scanning technology that tries to determine the user's age. It is important that these solutions be deployed in a context where safeguards are in place to ensure that privacy rights are respected. We don't want to create a framework that puts a duty in place without safeguards.