 All right, we've got a question from Ron who asks, can planner limit the visibility of tasks to only those who are assigned? And we've heard versions of this question before about limiting visibility. In other words, if I have 20 tasks in my plan and five resources, so resource number one, Mark, is assigned to seven of those 20 tasks in my plan, is there a way that Mark can only see those tasks that he is assigned to and not see those other tasks which he is not assigned to perhaps a setting? The answer would be no, unfortunately. Well, my first thought is too is that, if it's in planner and I'm consuming through my view, if I'm going in with my tasks, I'll only see my tasks, those that I'm assigned to. So my view, my default view for planner and to do with the to do sync are only to see those things which are mine. Now, let's explain why the answer is no for a second. And it's because planner is built on the M365 groups framework. So same thing with the Power's teams and Outlook groups and a bunch of other stuff and you're either an owner, a member or a guest. And members and guests can see pretty much everything with a few special exceptions that people will call me out in the comments for. So really no, but as Christian said, if you're in the tasks app in teams or the various places it shows up, you just see the tasks that are assigned to you. So you could use multiple different plans if you wanna limit the visibility that may not achieve your end goal, but. Yeah, I think what they're talking about most is permission. So being able to lock them down so other people can't edit or see things that aren't assigned to them, unfortunately is not a function of planner. We were kind of talking about that we need to use a different tool if that's a business requirement. But if you're just trying for ease of consumption you have the filter option, but you also have the my tasks option that lets you group them by the status or by the due date or by the plan. So using that group by option I think is helpful too. Well, I just think you're reading a lot into that. I don't see the word permissions anywhere Sherry. So you're going out on a limb there. Is there a way that Mark can only see those tasks that are assigned to and not see the other ones? That's me, it's permissions, but yeah. Well, it's ultimately planner is about team. It's about all of you, it's about transparency and visibility so that you can actually get your work done. It's about actions and working out loud. So to filter it, filter it yes by an individual so they can filter it themselves or you can filter it in a meeting. But it's actually about team tasks. So if you're talking about individual tasks, you need a different tool set for that. That's when you go to to do and maybe you've got to share one-on-one with your manager on to do on their own tasks. So what's in the me space and what's in the we space and are you choosing the right one as a tool for that? So understanding where it should sit is a different matter. Oh, go ahead, Max. Oh, sorry, but just one other thought and Kristi, I love the way you put that. If we're talking about a business process here where there are regular tasks and things that are happening on regular occurrence, I would also say planner is not the right tool and there are tools in the Microsoft space. I know this is M365, but even dynamics could be the right choice for that. Power platform, things like that. Well, and I was going to go that direction as well, say that look, there are, if you are getting into where you are, you have such a complex, I know this is a simple example, but you have a complex project and you want to limit the visibility of this. There are other project management tools that allow that, not Microsoft tools, because Microsofts are fairly simple. They're stripped down. I mean, even Project Online, it still has that open model where it's a team effort. If you're in the project, you should have visibility in to see correlated other actions and other tasks of other team members. You should be able to see the work breakdown structure and other impacts of your completing early or not completing a desk, how it impacts the overall plan. Planner is even more simple. It's just a, it's a list that has some other naming conventions and icons to it, but it's fairly simple. It's meant to be open and lightweight. So if it is a visibility, because we've had this, a version of this question asked about lists. Like I want people to be able to go in but only be able to see the list items that they go and create. So you could filter the view there, but if somebody who knows a little bit of what they're doing, you could still go in and see the entire list and all of the list items, whether or not they created them or the owners of each of those items. So it's still fairly open. So if your goal is just to restrict the view, then I'd say that, look, end users get that through the to do integration and through the tasks view, the my tasks within planner or within teams. Personal plan of any team. Of course, here we are having a discussion about it without having actually started. Let's do it. I was gonna think, did he read the question? Yeah, we do this at the beginnings of each one. All right, let's all read through.