If we are implementing a measure such as an orange tip, that is relatively easy to do. All manufacturers are already set up to do this, because that is a requirement in the United States, and they are quite a large market for airsoft, along with Europe. Even if you had to retroactively go back and make current inventory comply by having an orange tip, that is pretty easy to do. I don't really see that as being a very large burden. It would just be a matter of ordering in the tips, swapping out what you have for your current inventory, and then you would be in compliance.
Adopting more of a two-tier model like they use in the U.K. would allow us to continue using current inventory and then also add new products that are brightly coloured for that lower tier of people who aren't engaged in airsoft.
The other measures we have proposed don't really have anything much to do with the physical inventory itself, unless maybe we decide to put on an extra warning. A lot of brands already have warning labels in the manuals and on the boxes, but that's not standardized among manufacturers, so that's also easy to do. If we had a standard warning label, we could put it on the box and put it in the manuals, and that's pretty easy to accomplish.