 But I would like to be in the same country as you did, as I said, individuals that are granted the right to say 100% and in the States are obliged to consider it. But as far as I know this goes, between 100% and 100% is trackable. Is 100% trackable? Trackable. Trackable. Trackable. Trackable back to the other world that we pass through. So how can you ensure 100% privacy to individuals and to their own private transactions through Bitcoin or any other cryptocurrency? In a world like this, especially with technologies like OneName, that somehow goes in the direction where individuals trading may be forced to this amount of time and time. Thank you. Yeah, that's a great question. I think you've got to understand that Bitcoin is not 100% trackable. Maybe it's 75% trackable right now. If you compare that to Visa, which is 100% trackable, every time you make a Visa transaction, it's not just the Brazilian government that's watching you. It's like ten different intelligence agencies all watching you at the same time. In fact, it's probably illegal for the Brazilian government to watch you. What they do is they probably outsource it to Argentina, and you watch the Argentinians. That's usually how it plays out. It's a nice way to get around democracy. Payment systems as we have them are 100% trackable. Bitcoin is 75% trackable now, but it's getting more private, and we'll continue to get more private as time goes by. We have incredible innovations in the pipeline that take it from something that is partially trackable to something that is less and less trackable. There's a difference between mass and individual. Bitcoin makes it possible if you have an individual who is suspected of a crime, and if there is proper judicial process to seize their computers and their wallets, and see their addresses to track everything they've done. That perhaps is desirable in society. What it makes it difficult to do is do mass surveillance of the innocent. Again, that is desirable in society, that you can't do that, or certainly can't do it easily. There are more inventions coming down the pipeline. Stealth addresses, confidential transactions, remixers. There are hundreds of other cryptocurrencies that you can convert your Bitcoin into and out of very easily. The entire system opens up a lot more freedom and privacy. Over time, it will get better. We will have more and more privacy and anonymity in Bitcoin. If you look more broadly than Bitcoin, there are certainly other cryptocurrencies that offer even more privacy and anonymity for individuals. I'm quite optimistic that we are turning the tables and setting the world correctly, where we have privacy and governments don't have secrecy.