 The next question is about airdrops by anthropomorphosis, please. Is there any reason to take Bitcoin Cash, Bitcoin Gold, Bitcoin Diamond, Bitcoin Super, Bitcoin, etc. seriously? I don't know. I will not say that you shouldn't take these things seriously. Again, I don't like to make predictions with certainty. I do think that airdrops are not free money. Airdrops come with a rather significant price attached to them, and that price is the loss of privacy. In order to take advantage of an airdrop, you have to use keys that already had a balance before the fork. Perhaps if you have been doing your operational security properly, you control several different addresses. You don't use the same address twice. You don't have address reuse. You keep the UTXO separate. You are careful about how you manage your wallet. You have been able to maintain some degree of privacy. What happens if you try to cash out on one of these forks? Most people are going to do this in a very naive way, which is aggregating all of the UTXO in a single transaction, after splitting and moving it out. You have just associated all of those addresses, not just for the new fork, but for the original fork you kept it on. You have associated all of the addresses in Bitcoin that you had your Bitcoin on, because of the transaction you did in Bitcoin Cash. Trust me, intelligence agencies, analytics firms, and anybody else who has the desire to do data analytics, is watching. They are going to know exactly what you have, where you have it, and which addresses belong to you. If any one of those addresses was ever associated with an exchange or merchant that does KYC, or has a shipping address for you, or name attached to one of those addresses, now all of those addresses have your identity attached to them. That is a heavy price to pay to collect an airdrop. I haven't collected any airdrops. Let me put it that way, and I probably won't. We will see how it goes.