So we enjoy “free penetration testing.” As I said, 2 million attempts every day. Usually, you have to pay for this. We get it for free. And we do that by making sure that there is resilience, not just defense. Defense is fencing out; we don’t let those attacks go through. Resilience means we know some of them will go through, but because in every part of the stack we have a plurality of options, even if one particular component is compromised—we assume it’s probably breached at some point—the attacker cannot laterally move to other parts of the stack, and we can swap in alternatives in the same component. So for example, for cellular communication, we have multiple choices; for the hyperscaler, so-called cloud solutions, we have more than three choices, and so on. And so by working with a resilience mindset, each attack becomes some intelligence that we can share with democracies around the world so they can guard against the next attack. Because no democracy is an island, not even Taiwan. So Taiwan may be the front line for such attempts, but all democracies face the same issue.