 Larry says, I'm curious, if you've come across the question around Microsoft Forms, and if they're fairly susceptible to bot attacks, as they're no recapture. Our organization believes their usage for collecting external information surpasses their tolerance for risk. I'm sure not going to argue about their risk posture. I'm curious if you've seen that widely as well. We were talking about this earlier before we started recording. There's things about it and we'll provide the link to the support page about security privacy in Microsoft Forms, and whether it's compliant, you've got the different things elisted there. It's HIPAA, BAA, GDPR, compliant. They meet FERPA protection standards. It's pretty solid. As far as there's anything else about the risk profile of Forms, has anybody heard something? The biggest risk, I think, to Forms is when we think about injecting bad data, corrupt data, or bad attachments. This is where you really have to have a good governance policy. If you've already architectured your infrastructure and your content management correctly on the back end, so you've already defined what file types can and cannot come into your system, you've already maybe put DLP out so that certain data isn't allowed to come into your system at all. Let alone, this is where people talk about should we allow anonymous Forms or not. It can we allow them and who's allowed to do them and how do we manage them and how do we monitor them, but it all comes down to governance. As long as you have determined your risk tolerances, you've already set that up behind the scenes for content management, for information management, for policies, for DLP, then the Form itself is not the problem. Can it bring risk into your organization? 100%, but if you've mitigated that risk to your risk tolerance level behind the scenes, then the Form itself should be perfectly fine. If you're not doing all those other things, then absolutely an anonymous Form where you allow people to add attachments to it is probably a big risk to your organization. With the amount of organizations that I'm dealing with and the type of protection that they've already put in place, if they've got that high risk tolerance, they've already have done a lot of that due diligence. In Australia, we've got your digital blueprint for government here and that's pretty prescriptive on what they can and can't do. And Forms, and I deal with a lot of pretty heavy security type organizations and dealing with one at the moment that is extremely, extremely risk-averse and heavy and are very high on security and they have turned on Forms. All of them have turned on Forms after having done their due diligence around it and not having a problem. I mean, if you're dealing with external parties, for example, Forms will turn off the ability to be able to add attachments. That alone, the moment you make it an external form, it's like, no, turn it off. And there's other products for that. You've got your Dynamics 365, which goes into your customer and you get all your Forms through there and then that's got all that security and that's meant more for externals in a lot of respects. So, there are different ways that you can actually go, but I'm not seeing the issues coming up that's like that personally. All I'd say is that when you allow anonymous users to upload questionable file types, you are opening yourself up to any other malicious file types that that user has used and beyond that. So, I was trying to make kind of an STD joke and it wasn't working out. But when you get those- I think you've got more risk with your attachments on emails than you ever will for something like Forms. I mean, you've got to put it in context, guys, really. I mean, there are so many other ways that you could get hit. I don't see Forms as being a potential way to be hit in a lot of respects. They're not going to randomly trip over the form link and accidentally have their bot single out your form and then try to upload malicious data. They're going to try to do it kind of across the board, but it's not going to be targeted at Forms to your point. Yeah, I mean, look, you can be foolish around it again, like anonymous access, post it out publicly in a place where you're going to attract the behavior where somebody wants to go and cause problems. But yeah, you're right. Generally, you're not. Yeah, I saw it, like when the pandemic, when it was hitting, and especially around Australia, which one with COVID, I saw so many of those, the QR codes that we were using right around Australia that were in just, we had anywhere you stepped into, whether it was a restaurant or a cafe or anywhere you had to fill in a form. And that form had the QR code and there were so many of them I filled out that was using Microsoft Forms in the back end. Now, if we were going to really see an issue when it just literally went bang globally, then I would have thought that it would have come up as a potential, then I didn't hear anything around it as a security risk, not through any clients, anyone I was dealing with, yeah, yeah. So I kind of go, hang on a second. I think it's out of proportion for the way that I saw it used everywhere, everywhere. So, yeah, yeah. I just think it's a bit of a mute point personally. It's like, no, go away. Get good governance. Yes, yeah. Yeah, there's, I mean, look, there are some articles that are out there. There's one, this is a couple of years old. There's an article about you do exfiltrate data and pull data back out. There's, again, there's some change that have been happening, whether that's still valid in that case. I'm just looking to see if there's anything new. But just about every one of the articles that you scan past, the answer is, is it secure? And what I'm reading, they're like, yes, it is a very secure solution. So I'm talking about data protection and encryption, the user access and authentication. Again, you don't recommend anonymous access, publish it out to Twitter. Just open yourself up to two problems. But usually for most of the use cases, inside your organization or external with trusted customers and partners, it's pretty solid. I've used it for general. I've posted forms out on Twitter and LinkedIn and I'm gonna ask for general feedback of that and have it experience any problems.