 All right, this one comes from someone named A Nani Moose. You have to be anonymous to ask this question. Nobody wants, nobody wants you to know that they asked this question. You know, they don't want to be caught. The company sees it, they're going to fire them and say, you're a security risk, get out. Okay, well, here's the question that Anonymous asks. Can anyone give me options on how to turn off Microsoft Authenticator for Office 365? I have multiple students. Okay, so this is, I'm assuming teams in education and I don't want them to install the Authenticator app on their phone. So maybe we should say we should not answer this on their grounds that we could, most of us could lose our MVP status by telling them how to do to violate their security. One, I wouldn't do it. No offense, you're telling us you're dealing with students. Students are not always the most reliable, safety conscious or anything like that. I mean, just saying. So, and if it's college students, there's a whole other subset of things that could go on in that kind of a setting. So I feel like it would be a bad idea. Is it something that you can do if you're using conditional access policies? Yes, you can have groups of people, individual users that you can put in an exception, but would I do this? Absolutely not. Well, one other thing, again, depending on the age, if it's college students, I mean, I'd be surprised that they don't already have Authenticator on there because of other applications and systems. And hopefully, I didn't even say younger kids with phones. I'm reading this as I don't want to have to ask students to install another application and go through that, want to be as streamlined as possible. But when you're talking about the security of and the risk of not having multi-factor authentication in place, it's better to teach them what it is, why and to use it than to remove it because it's easier. Yeah, most people are using MFA for other things. They're banks, even gaming. Gaming requires MFA at this point. So I put a link to the, there's a way to change it. Instead of using the Authenticator download, you can switch it to text or you can switch it to the number that pops up. So instead of using the Authenticator download, just simply change the method that they're doing MFA by. And then if it's just like an SMS message or something, then that way they won't have to download that application. Yeah, because if it's the supportability of another app on their personal phones, then do the text method, right? I mean, everybody has as text. So I would look at that option before I do the turnoff thing at all. Christian's like, I already do 90% of the work for you guys. If you could do the 1% for me, that'd be great. Well, I think when I almost made the comment earlier, it says, yeah, Christian, I just add the link. And I said, talking about links makes such awesome video. Thank you. May I have another?