Thanks for asking.
The strings would be first on the topics. Right now, if you look at R and D tax credits or superclusters.... I mean, superclusters are somewhat in a limited area, but overall, the money is spread out very broadly, and that can have nice advantages. However, for these moon shots, that's not what we need. We need to have a much clearer picture of what needs to be done and only fund those efforts that are sufficiently aligned with that. That's number one. That's kind of obvious; that's the point of a moon shot.
Number two, which is less obvious and maybe more difficult, is to force the organizations that are going to be using government money to do that work to be transparent, as I was talking about before. That means sharing the knowledge that has been generated, sharing the data that has been generated, sharing the code. In some cases, we also want to make sure that the IP or the licences that are going to be attached to the created property are easily and cheaply transferable, for example, to developing countries. The reason this is important is.... Think about pandemics or climate change. We really want poorer countries in Africa to use the technology we might develop so that it's going to protect us against climate change or future pandemics. However, we need to put that up front in the contracts that we sign with companies.