I think it's more or less leaning in the same direction. Though the approaches may vary, they may be coming back to this recommendation of the European Commission. It would probably have been more powerful if it were a different form of legislation. It is actually moving in the same areas, and also outlining the same areas that need to be tackled, which are semiconductors, artificial intelligence, quantum, biotech and all the others.
One more thought on this is that none of the allied countries should be left out, because what our research also proved is that if China can't find the technology in a more technologically advanced country, it will focus on those loopholes. It will find countries that have pockets of excellence in different areas of research but probably don't have much of the safeguards.