When you own something, you need to protect it. If you need to sue based on that, of course, putting my legal hat on, I would say, yes, but there what needs to happen—and I think we need to avoid that because it would cause access-to-justice issues, litigation and more backlog in the process—is to make sure that the technology is properly protected to begin with and that we have sufficient and proper patents around the techs. Sometimes it's not just one tech, because the claim construction process is key.
This is where, going back to the TTOs, you need smart people there, working alongside lawyers and ensuring we have a strong foundation of patenting, because if you get it right at a nascent stage, you can avoid the follow-on litigation. Litigation will always happen in some ways, but you will diminish that.