 Yeah, I just wanted to echo what Ms. Sheehan and Mr. Wines and Ms. Keckliona have said here today. But what's interesting here is the conversation that Mr. Reed had earlier about people pirating games, even that they had given away for free, and the wide availability of these decryption keys, it kind of demonstrates that these locks aren't preventing pirates from pirating. They're not preserving the copyright of these creative works. What they are actually doing is they are preventing law-abiding citizens who want to do law-abiding things, such as repair their devices. And so I think that's particularly relevant when looking at this exemption request, that what we're asking for is an exemption for a limited purpose to perform a repair. We are not asking for an exemption to pirate content. And the underlying work that is being protected by this TPM, it isn't the movies on the Blu-rays or the DVDs or even on the video game discs. It's the software, the firmware that is controlling this lock itself. So I think that's also particularly relevant here when we're talking about what copyright work is actually being protected here with this lock on the optical drive to the motherboard. So there's just this overlap, the concerns about piracy here feel more like fear mongering as opposed to actual realities of what is at stake. Okay.