 Now that you mentioned educational institutions and training companies, this is a great opportunity for them as well because it gives a better higher standing to their profession, so more people will be interested in training. But this is also, I'm thinking about here, inspired by what you said, it's also a challenge for those training companies or for universities like the one you're teaching at, because the students will expect that through the training that they receive at the university, they will be able to become experts and there will be a way to actually test it if they are an expert or not. How do you think educational institutions should adapt to that? I don't think it's a fight. I think we should work together, right? So as a teacher, I know and we know as teachers that we don't have enough time to cover everything, right? That's why we have professional courses. We have other ways to try and be specialized in various fields because subtitling is one of the areas of ADT. There are so many other areas. I think that it's a kind of we need to embrace this process together and having a certification helps confirming that you are in this pathway to becoming an expert. You cannot be an expert just because just finish your master, right? It's a work in progress. You need to practice and work on it and it's like a bicycle but with some training in there, right? So I don't think it's something that is not in opposition to or criticizing any other areas out there. It's a collaboration. I think this is really important and also the fact just like the AVT Pro that companies were involved but also associations were involved, academics, because we are all part of the same unsounder kind of, I guess.