 Whenever you're consuming a product, be it food or beer or cannabis, you want to make sure that it's not going to harm you. Nandia is a cannabis testing company, so we test cannabis to allow our clients to release their product to be able to sell it to consumers. The foundation of the cannabis regulations is the strictness of the rules of one of those which being the testing requirements. We start with obviously the potency of the material, so THC, CBD are the ones of interest to Health Canada right now. Then we move into some of the sort of things that aren't supposed to be there, so we look at heavy metals. We are looking at what we call aflatoxins, which are a chemical byproduct left behind by some molds, particularly nasty. Any solvents we use in our processing, you have to make sure they're gone. Beyond that, Health Canada has published a list of 96 pesticides that everybody must inform to. Nandia is a third-party testing lab, which means we're independent from the licensed producers who are submitting samples to us. We've got separate facilities, separate staff, separate equipment to ensure that there's no influence on our testing results. When you, as a client, know that it's been tested at Nandia or in another lab that meets the requirements by Health Canada, you basically know that there's limited contamination in the sample, so you know that it's the safer option. My team right now, so I have a lab technician, which requires generally an university degree in chemistry, biology or biochemistry. I also have, you know, analytical chemists that require really a master degree or a bachelor degree or three to four years lab experience. And then I have really scientists or senior scientists, which generally require really a PhD degree. What separates the regulated market from the illicit market is the rules. And a big chunk of those rules are the testing requirements for the products. Essentially, without the testing, you don't know what is actually in there. You know, Health Canada has set guidelines and limits that they believe are safe for consumption. The key thing is you want to have a predictable experience. When you go to liquor store and you buy a 151 Bacardi and a bottle of wine at 12% and a beer at 5%, educated consumers will know what the effect is going to be from those different products. What we're trying to do with the new products that are coming out is ensure that the potency of those products is accurately labeled so that the consumer can get the desired effect that they want and they can understand, you know, what the effect of two milligrams taken in a gummy is versus 10 versus more than that. And when you buy a material in the black market, you could be getting product that has no cannabinoids in them at all. You could be getting products that have 10 times more than you think you're getting. The safest way is going to be to buy something, obviously, from a licensed BC cannabis store. You know, they're going to know that out of very minimum this already extensive testing has been done. Knowing that you're consuming something that's been looked at for all these contaminants versus going in blindly and consuming something that may be more accessible or less costly, essentially, it's a risk that many people probably wouldn't take if they knew what the implication was.