Despite a few rare exceptions like Donald Trump delegate Peter Thiel, Silicon Valley has overwhelmingly thrown its support behind Hillary Clinton. Last week, a list of tech heavyweights, including Eric Schmidt, Sheryl Sandberg, Airbnb C.E.O. Brian Chesky, and Netflix C.E.O. Reed Hastings, endorsed Clinton for president, according to a letter circulated by Clinton’s campaign. “Trump would destroy much of what is great about America,” Hastings said in the letter. Now, Clinton is returning the love. On Tuesday, the presumptive Democratic nominee unveiled a comprehensive tech plan serenading Silicon Valley with promises of high-speed internet access and investments in computer science education.

Most of Clinton’s plans build on policies instituted by President Barack Obama, with the addition of an immigration proposal similar to the “start-up visa” Mark Zuckerberg’s FWD.us political action group has proposed for foreign founders who want to start their businesses in the U.S. Clinton supports current net neutrality rules, preventing Internet providers from throttling Internet speeds, and wants every U.S. household to be connected to high-speed internet by 2020. She wants to increase investments in STEM education and expand the availability of inexpensive WiFi in public places. A new student debt initiative Clinton wants to put in place would allow founders and as many as 20 of the start-up’s early employees to defer their student loans for up to three years. If the start-up can "provide measurable social impact and benefit," Clinton’s plan would provide some loan forgiveness too.

The former secretary of state also seemed to echo Apple C.E.O. Tim Cook’s views on encryption: “Hillary rejects the false choice between privacy interests and keeping Americans safe,” her platform states. Earlier this year, Apple found itself in a public, dragged-out dispute with the F.B.I. when a federal judge issued a court order that would require Apple to allow the F.B.I. to access encrypted data on an iPhone 5C used by one of the shooters in last year’s San Bernardino terrorist attack. At the time, Donald Trump, now the presumptive Republican presidential nominee and Clinton’s primary opponent, called for a boycott against Apple and argued in favor of the United States closing off parts of the Internet to prevent extremist propaganda online.

Clinton’s statements on encryption—and on the tech industry in general—are more sophisticated than any that have been released by the Trump campaign so far. Throw in Clinton’s promise to toss questions about the controversial “gig economy” over to a “high level” working group of “experts, business, and labor leaders,” and you’ve got a veritable love letter to Sand Hill Road’s power players. That’s one deal that even Trump can’t beat.