
Certainly. So in Taiwan, we believe that broadband is a human right, because, as I said, democracy is a social technology here. So, even though, of course, we can gather around the parliament and have a conversation, we can also gather around public squares online and have a conversation. And in Taiwan, because we are the most free in terms of freedom on the internet in Asia, we believe that the people should have the right to assemble peacefully online, as well as offline. So we have a lot of spaces built by the civil society, but they're very legitimate. Anybody getting 5,000 signatures online can force a ministerial response, a collaboration meeting. So we have hosted more than 100 of such cross-sector meetings as a result, mostly from people's petitions. And after six years of doing that, by 2020, the approval rating of Dr. Tsai Ing-wen, the president at the time, was more than 70%. So from 9% to more than 70% in a short span of six years, just by trusting the people.