Okay. But if we are prepared to give our information to a store, as Ms. Brown said, to an employee who works at that shop—who can use that information as well, obviously.... In fact, anybody who works for that airline or anybody who works for a travel agency who has that information could share it with whoever they want. Here, we're suggesting that we're going to provide that information to the United States' administration, which is obviously doing this for one purpose and one purpose only, in my mind. I don't really think they care about me and they're not going to sell my information to a marketing company from whom I'm going to get all those telemarketing calls. They're doing it simply to keep everybody secure and safe.
You may not understand why this is keeping people safe, but I understand why they want to keep it for seven days. I'd want to keep it for seven days too, because when I fly, sometimes I go to Australia, and it takes two or three days to get there, and you don't even know what the person is doing.
They want to keep track of it so that they can do an analysis afterward, in case something happens.
You're nodding your head affirmatively.