Google has the good and the bad at times, right, in terms of the leadership they show. There have been some things this year that have pushed companies like Twitter to be more proactive in combatting hate speech.
When you think about this, I think we're in a funny situation here, because these are American companies whose servers reside in the U.S. and have the first amendment governing things like aggressive hate propaganda and hate speech. They don't have the same visceral reaction we do. They simply don't. Even at the corporate level, I think, it is hard to galvanize action, but we do see them taking action when there's a lot of publicity. It may take an extreme event to push that over the top, such as the targeting of the actor Leslie Jones with racist, sexist, and misogynist hate speech on Twitter.
I think some of those companies are getting the message. In particular, a company like Twitter has to get its act in order because, for all their billions, they are actually struggling to broaden their base and their platform. They are motivated. It is capitalism. It is a private sector company, so I think we can vote with our thumbs. We can push them—