 So we've got a question here from Minakshi. I have a user who is a site collection administrator. It's always about like the friend has the problem. It's not the person asking the question. This is for a friend. She's asking. He's asking, I don't know. Absolutely. He and other user who deleted files on purpose is also site collection administrator and owner of the site. The other user who has deleted a lot of files and went to the recycle bin and it says it does not have access. Both of the users are owners and site collection admins. The domain administrator was able to see the items. After screen refresh items are no longer visible, but they are visible in second stage bin. The files are deleted today and should not have moved to second stage. If the user who is owner and site collection administrator goes to the site settings, click on recycle bin under site collection administration. Sometimes you can get through the recycle bin and sometimes can't. He tried again today and saw only three files. After two hours later, he got an error message, denied access. So he was able to get in, but then later was denied access. For now, if he goes to a second stage recycle bin, he can see the full documents that other users deleted. Issue is getting to the recycle bin. How can this be fixed? There's a lot to unpack there. Yes. I feel like these friends are all playing each other. Yeah, they're changing each other's permissions. They get a lot of users with a lot of access that are doing things on purpose. Picking away your access, taking away your access. And losing access and losing files. It's like battle of the admins. Yeah, that was like, I just had the experience where something that I'm the admin on, when the recycle bin wasn't there, it was in the second stage, and it just happened. It was in the second stage and I was able to restore it, but I'm like, okay, one, I was already wondering like how it got deleted and stuff happens. We hit the wrong keys sometimes, but for it to jump right before my eyes to second stage, like nobody else was in there but me, I did not hit delete. I didn't, yeah. Was the SharePoint online or on-prem? Online. So little known fact about the recycle bin. I mean, the only reason I'm taking this, because this gave me an opportunity to pull this out. And I had written the section on recycle bins, but memory pressure, not memory pressure, I'm sorry, storage, lack of storage space and quotas can have an impact on that. Because when things are deleted, they count against the quota. They got to go somewhere. And if you've got a lot of stuff that's, if you're in a constrained storage situation, things may advance through faster. So I don't know what you're saying. Well, so that explains like that part of the issue. What about the fact that they can get in there, they are denied access. They're able to get in, then they're denied access. I think his friend is playing a joke on him and taking away his access so he can't go in to see what's in the recycle bin. It makes you wonder, but the way this is written, it gives me the impression they're on-prem. Not online. And configuration for, if you're in a non-prem scenario, recycle bin configuration is determined on a web app basis. So different web apps can have different recycle bin configurations. I have got to, they may, there are a bunch of different ways, if we asked a bunch of questions, we might be able to figure this out. For one, depending on how they're going in, if they've got the web application extended to multiple URLs, I don't know if they're going in the same way, but I wouldn't expect this kind of behavior, but I can find ways to explain it. I just don't know if any of the situations are relevant to them. Just thought of a great t-shirt idea, your SharePoint on-prem, expect the unexpected. Well, I'll just bring my t-shirt up today. I'll keep up the good. Burn it all. That's great, that's great. SharePoint, burn it all. Yeah. I'd say restart your server phone. Yeah, that'll definitely solve their problem max. I mean, it'll at least keep them occupied with some other problems until- Isn't that the, but that's the answer, that's the first answer to every technical question is, you can try turning it off and on again. Yeah. It's at her SharePoint. It's surprising the number of people in technology who don't actually do that first, so. I'll remember in the early days of what is now Office 365 when I was at Microsoft, and there was a lot of turning servers off and on again. Oh, but, B-Pause days? Yeah. Yeah, that totally doesn't happen anymore. That is a, yeah, listen to the Microsoft guy, people, come on. Congratulations, Max, you're representing the entire organization. Sorry, SouthChia, I know nothing. I like this one too, I have a user, so I have a friend who has this problem. Asking for a friend, yeah.