 Well, it really depends oftentimes on the statement being made, but you know, the best statement to try to fact check is something that involves facts. I mean, you cannot fact check an opinion. Like someone may have the opinion that tax cuts mean higher revenues. You know, that's a debatable opinion, but you can't necessarily do a fact check about that. But if someone had a statement that when John F. Kennedy cut taxes, it meant there were higher revenues, well, that's a historical thing that you can fact check and determine whether or not that is correct. So the first thing is to make sure you are fact checking something that it is really rooted in facts. And then secondly, it's just good old fashioned newspaper journalism reporting. If someone makes an assertion, a claim, you know, you go and find out whether or not it's true. I mean, just recently Donald Trump said that the ISIS terror group had control of the oil in Libya. So that's an easy enough thing to check. Does ISIS actually control only oil wells in Libya? It involved talking to people in the Libyan oil industry, talking to analysts based in Libya, reading news reports, and ultimately the conclusion was no, they don't control any oil wells in Libya, and they're not making any money from oil in Libya.