 And as you were earlier saying, that most of these were like, you know, zero day vulnerability. Also, when we look at, you know, ransom where, I think encryption, you know, they encrypt, you know, as I said, you said, you know, it could be network, it could be your whole data. That was their, you know, preferred model. Is that still the case or it has changed a bit? Well, and what you've seen is, you know, it's a two phase model. So they want two paydays. And so originally it was coming in encrypt and we'll give you a key. Now it is coming in, you know, spread, be able to encrypt everything. But while you're spreading and making sure you're able to shut everything down, exfilling data. It could be contractual data, customer data, something that they don't want to have go public. And so once you've gotten that, then you hold that data hostage. And we're seeing that more and more companies are having them focus on that. And I have to assume that hackers focus on where they can make more money. And so we're seeing this shift to data being held hostage as the focus over encryption. And even to the point where they're gonna go to your customers and say, hey, you know, bank X is your bank. We took all their data. You need to call bank X and tell them to pay us so we don't release your data. So they're actually going to the second order victim and telling them to go back to the victim and tell them, hey, pay these ransomware people so they don't get our data out. Which I think again, going to innovation is great. It makes me sad that we're in this world, but yeah, it's kind of where we're seeing this shift.