 Most currencies were started just because people trusted them. It was like the promise of gold or started out being shells, and you know, then it was gold, and then it was the promise of gold. And then it was a promise that the government would back you up, which is a little less of a promise. Well, and that was a given government, and that government was tied to a geographic territory. All of a sudden we have a currency that is not tied to a government and not tied to a geographic territory. Well, that frees us, because governments have always used that currency to control us in some ways, keep controls over that currency. Well, this frees us. We can operate across border much easily. We can move money across border much easily, much more easily, and we reduce the friction significantly. You know, you wonder why are those banks so big and those bankers all so rich? Why are they all dressed so well? Well, it's because two and a half to four percent of every transaction you ever do is picked up by the credit card company, and the bank gets the bulk of that. That would go away. And so you do see the banks feeling threatened here, and for good reason, because if you use Bitcoin instead of dollars, the banker doesn't control your Bitcoin. He controls your dollars. So I think you have this new opportunity for a currency that is frictionless, not no two and a half to four percent, transparent. Everybody can see exactly where it goes, so you keep perfect records. It is open. It's cross-border, so you can use it anywhere. You can go from one country to another, pull down your Bitcoin, and everything's fine. And it's a great store of value, but it's also going to be faster than the Visa network. So this is going to be one of those things where it's like it's a sea change. There is new technology, and it is better, faster, cheaper than anything else out there. We're going to move that way, and governments have to figure out how they're going to adapt to not controlling everybody through the currency.