 leaked report from the World Health Organization, showed that the latest vaccination tests have failed. But in terms of zoonoses then, so, I mean, I think we have to talk about Ebola again, I think, and how often do we see diseases jump species? So the cordyceps genus, I believe, infects mostly insects and it, you know, grows inside them and does all the stuff that we see in the game here. But it seems that it's jumped from maybe one of those insects into humans or a branch of evolution. So how often do we see kind of disease leaping from one to another? I think we're certainly seeing a lot more of it in recent years, but, you know, a lot of it could be environmental, it could be that we're just better at detecting it and that our surveillance systems and technologies improved so that we're able to identify aspects like this a lot faster. Obviously, with kind of the reduction in habitat and cutting down a lot of like forests, which are normal, like kind of habitats and environments for sort of mammals like bats and, you know, bats make up 25% of mammals and there's lots of kind of research around potential host organisms, like NEPA, for example. They found that bats were kind of the animal in which they were transferring disease to pigs and later to humans. And I think the Zoonotic episodes, like I said, either are becoming more apparent because we're getting better at detecting them or because we do kind of live in an environment now where habitats are becoming a little bit more restricted. So there is that more crossover between animals and humans. And I think sort of anywhere where you're going to get large human populations and animal populations together, you know, the longer period of time that that goes on for the kind of more, I don't know about risk, but certainly something that needs to be observed and under some surveillance. So, you know. As always, it's us. That's the problem ultimately by, yes, well, NEPA I suppose in Bangladesh is people living closer to bats and I think they farm date palm sap off of trees and the bats eat the sap and maybe urinate in the sap and the humans drink the urine-infecting sap and yes, it's riffle. And you're right, when we're not there, then it wouldn't happen. But I think the WHO, I believe, has a list of diseases on the, you know, they're keeping an eye on.