
The Digital Markets Act at the moment is in another round of consultation about expanding it not just for instant messaging, but for social media as well. Actually, the state of Utah in the U.S. already passed the Digital Choices Act. Let's say starting next July, if you're a Utah citizen, and you want to switch from x.com to, say, Blue Sky or True Social, You can keep your community. The new likes, reactions, followers just flow to your new network. So people do not need to feel trapped in any of those social networks. So there is a future, I think, where it's now the default for just people in Utah, but through the Digital Markets Act, maybe for everyone in the EU. And maybe the Europe can do the euro stack for every part of this through radical interoperability, become almost like a decentralized euro stack. So instead of, you know, the national champion Airbus building the European option for each stack, maybe you can just force the Silicon Valley and maybe Beijing players to become like utilities, where they have to operate in the open, inspectable, and most importantly, freely offer portability among the choices.