Okay. Thanks, Rob. Well, first of all, I would just point out that where we are today, VeriSign, Inc., the cooperative agreement, ICANN, this whole process is a result of decades of very successful policy across many different administrations of many political stripes. So we tend to sort of see that as not directly impacting factor, just a long-supported consistent policy with security and stability as the main driver. And as you mentioned, there are new folks in December. Of course, we have a new CEO in ICANN, and we will be getting a new NTIA administrator shortly, we believe. And we look we have great relationships with both organizations, and we look forward to continuing them. We have always maintained a good working relationship with ICANN for many decades, and we look forward to working with the new CEO, Curtis Linfist, and his leadership team, particularly in the areas we engage in mostly, which is security and stability of the DNS and DNS abuse. About the second part of your question, ongoing discussions with the NTIA, that is typical for our relationship. We look forward to working with the new NTIA assistant secretary, a partner confirmation, I look forward to meeting her. I think until then, I will not speculate. But let me add some background that might be a little bit helpful there. First, the cooperative agreement has long contained, as I think most of the listeners here know, strict requirements that VeriSign, Inc. meet the most rigorous availability and performance specifications of any TLD due to the reliance services and infrastructure on .com and .net. In 2018, amendment 35 retained these provisions. And while there was reduced regulation, there was also explicit protection for registrant first amendment rights by guaranteeing that the .com registry will remain content neutral. These and the other policies in a 2018 amendment have proven in the last six years to be successful in continuing the policy of security and stability. And resilience first and the critical importance of .com to the security and stability of the infrastructure that is literally critical to the digital economy of the US. And finally, I will just mention that the recent .com renewals enabled us to clear up some misinformation that was spread during that process. One, for example, is that we received money from the government, which simply is not true. Our cooperative agreement is not a procurement contract, and the US government does not fund VeriSign, Inc. for the secure and reliable Internet service that VeriSign, Inc. helps to preserve every day and has without interruption for 27 years. And as I mentioned, now processing an average of over 400 billion transactions every day, by the way, is 40 times the number of daily average Google searches. 40x there was a lot of misinformation about our pricing as well. As you know, our pricing is capped and it is transparent. It is a simple fact that our limited pricing flexibility at the wholesale level has not kept up with global CPI over the last six years. While at the same time, we have seen the unregulated retail price increases exceed our wholesale price increases. So, hopefully, that bit is helpful. Look forward to engaging with our new regulators, and we look forward to...