The main lesson is the government needs to trust the people before the people trust the government back. To give no trust is to get no trust. So, for example, in 2024, in Taiwan, we saw a lot of deepfake messages, advertisements on, say, Facebook or YouTube. You see Jensen Huang, you know, the Nvidia CEO, a Taiwanese. You see his face saying that he’s giving back to his, Taiwan, friends and families, some free cryptocurrency or free investment advice or something like that. It’s an investment scam. Now, if the government doesn’t trust the people, we will probably go to censorship or something like that. But because we radically trust our citizens, we sent 200,000 text messages to random numbers around Taiwan with only one question. What should we do about deepfakes and information integrity online? And people answered with many very good ideas. And thousands volunteered to join an online citizen assembly, which by that time people understand this comes from this trusted number 111. So this is actually Audrey Tang asking you to join a citizen assembly, and we chose 450 people statistically representative of our polity. So it’s a mini public of Taiwan, and then they crowdsourced the laws, the ideas that really made the defect ads not a problem anymore this year.