Thank you for the question.
It's true that we keep coming back to this issue, which all three of us have brought since the beginning of this meeting: the attribution aspect.
In our cybersecurity efforts, we often correlate to try to see if there is an intrusion or an attack going on, what the target is, and what the security objective is. The reasoning is the same. It starts in cyberspace and ends up in the everyday space on the ground, therefore protests and so on.
So it's hard to say whether the motivations or reasons that led to the protests are necessarily related to the Kremlin, the Russians or other such events. There are also isolated initiatives, even pro-Russian ones, where people personally take action to help move things in Russia's direction.
It's not easy to determine whether it was a Russian initiative that led to protests like these. It's also difficult to correlate when the Russian invasion started on February 24 to some events that happened on the ground in connection with the protests or with attacks on energy sector infrastructure in Ukraine, operators or satellites, because we mustn't forget the space element.
We are looking into this issue, and we haven't yet found the answer when it comes to this attribution aspect, which allows for investigations. Once we determine attribution, that will bring in other legal aspects and responsibilities—