 Rob says, I have a client with Microsoft 365. Used to be with Sherweb Canada as a reseller. The address of the clients, M365 had to be in the U.S. Even though they were in Australia, something to do with Sherweb, not able to resell in Australia, right? Microsoft's first line said, we cannot change the address from U.S. to AU. Because of this, we cannot then add their tenant to PAX 8 Australia. So it's another marketplace. Anyone have a solution to this? No. Can we get a new tenant and migrate it? Because it's not really a tenant issue. It's a domain issue. So what he's talking about is the client with M365, I'm assuming he doesn't call this out, but he's saying change the address from U.S. to AU. I have to assume he's talking about e-mail. And that's a whole change in domain. So Microsoft can't change domains, number one, because they're not a domain registrar. You'd actually have to go to a registrar for AU and then register in U.S. But even if it isn't about e-mail, Microsoft can't do that because it's a legal issue. They can't cross country boundaries. They can't, there's a separate, why do you think they have data centers that are isolated in different regions for Azure? It's because GDPR and compliance and governance and everything else between all these countries. So I personally think it's one of two issues. Number one, I bet any money, it's because they just have to register their domain in the U.S. And it's registered in Australia and that's a domain registrar issue. Number two, Microsoft can't do it legally. They're talking apples and oranges. They're not talking the same thing. And then there was silence. Done. Nobody wants to touch the legal issues. Nope. It's like Microsoft licensing. Nobody wants to touch licensing. I like licensing. I'll talk licensing all day long. All day long. Let's not talk licensing. Yeah, no, you know, I mean, my first thought too is that it's like depending on who you bought it for. Again, I think you're spot on. It's the legal issue there. If Microsoft says, no, we can't do it, then. Even if it's first line that says we can't do it. I'm guessing it's because they have a reference card that says somebody wants to move a domain from this country to this country. No. Data sovereignty is likely the issue. So I think I'm going to go to a random community and type in a question of how I can get around this. Why would you want to get around it? That's my question. That's my point. There has to be a way. Why are there ones that don't want to get around it? Let's be honest. Depending on who you talk to in this world, sometimes you feel like you're not getting a whole story. Maybe they're checking for a second opinion. Yep. Yep. And that's all I'll say about that. No one ever asked for a second opinion based off stuff we talk about. So that's my point. Because it'll depend. It depends. Or it'll be out of date in approximately 30 seconds.