Definitely, and we also see that the younger generations have a better sense of how much surveillance is going on. They insist actually more on end-to-end encryption, on privacy-preserving platforms, and so on. So I think the idea behind reverse mentorship is that people closest to the pain—that is to say, the younger people, the digital natives—come up with solutions much more readily than we who are digital migrants. So many of the most innovative countermeasures in Taiwan were designed by people younger than 35, sometimes younger than 18. So we need to bring them into the seats of power much earlier. This is called the Pygmalion effect. If you expect them to set the agenda for the country, they mature very quickly. But if you exclude them out of the political powers, then they become cynical, maybe polarized, maybe extremist.