So, my point here is that we need to think about the online rights. That’s to say human rights as the underlying operation system. That is to say, in Taiwan, for example, we have broadband access as human rights. Anywhere, if you don’t have broadband, that’s my fault, like literally my fault. You can email me and people did actually email me saying that their human rights being violated because they’re in a quarantine place and they cannot watch streaming video. And within two weeks, we set up a new repeating tower, fixed that, and the person actually made a point because at that time, they’re already outside of the quarantine, drove back, measured the speed, posted on social media, to allow me to account.