 So what are ethics, actually? And it's interesting, you know, I used to be a student of theology. I'm not religious, but ethics are kind of about beliefs, right? Assumptions, principles, moral code. And your morality is a strange thing when you think about it, especially today, as we're all interchanging and becoming global citizens. But the bottom line is really that technology does not have ethics. Now, I've worked in technology business for a long time. I used to be a musician and producer. And then I went on the internet. It's quite clear if we're looking around technology as self-enforcing, self-perpetuating, self-empowering, if you give a computer a bunch of CPUs, you will put them inside and just create more power, right? So when we look at scary things like singularity, which I'm sure you're aware of, what will be expected in 2029 when Ray Kurzweil says machines will have similar or even vaster intelligence than people, what's going to happen to ethics? What's going to happen to beliefs? Things are not numbers, right? Because, you know, whether we like it or not, we don't think in numbers. We're much more complex than that.