 You want to take us to, while we're on the privacy protection thing, you want to take us to Luyan? Uh, yeah. Uh, uh, Luyan says, I recently tried to install some Adobe apps on my Mac and I kept getting an error message from Adobe reading the logs. I helped pages. I could not figure this out until I finally stumbled on a page explaining system integrity protection and how to disable it. Following instructions, I turned it off. I was able to install my apps and then turned it back on. Apparently this has been a problem since 2017. My question is, is this a problem on Adobe side of things or is this an Apple problem, or is it a problem on my end with perhaps, uh, an old corrupted install file from years ago? Um, I would like to understand this for future problems. Um, I, I think you had something to say about this Dave here. I personally, I mean, I only use Adobe reader. I, so I don't really live in the Adobe world, but I don't know. It's, uh, it makes me nervous that you have to do this to install. I'm not sure what piece of Adobe software, um, they're trying to install. I, I have not run into this personally. No, I haven't run into it either, uh, but I did a search for Adobe and system integrity protection and found, uh, a help article from Adobe that says when installing creative cloud desktop apps, uh, you need to give correct permissions to the slash TMP folder. And, uh, they, they discuss, you know, what the symptoms are that, that this causes and they say, if you can't change the permissions on the slash TMP folder, then you might need to disable system integrity protection so that you can give the correct permissions to the slash TMP folder. But the thing is it shouldn't be using that folder in that way. No, there's other temp folders that you are supposed to use. And, uh, I don't know why they're, they're the installers have like a sandbox temp folder that they are permitted to write to. It's not a problem. I don't know why Adobe is obsessing about using like what, what one would call the Unix standard temp folder, which is it slash TMP. Uh, I mean, it could be argued that Apple is breaking Unix, Unix conventions by, by, uh, securing that, but there are like, if you want to look at holes in Unix and how to like sneak yourself root access onto a Unix machine, especially if you rewind like 20 years, the temp folder was the place to go and do this because it's world writable. You could get the root user to execute something that was living in the temp folder that you could then write to, like it's the source of a lot of Swiss cheese in, uh, in, in Unix. So locking it down a little bit, like I, I get why this might be something that Apple wanted to lock down, but they created a better path. Adobe is just not following it evidently. So yeah, I'm with short version. I'm with you. Shouldn't have to do this, but you might have to. And I put this article that I found in the show notes so that