 But when people are considering open sourcing their work, what could go wrong? So the big fear that everyone has is that you do all of the work, spend all of the effort, the time, the money, putting the investment to make something. And then someone swoops in, picks it up, sells it as their own, and gains all the benefit of your hard work without having done any of that work themselves and without returning any of that value to you. In practice, we find this doesn't really happen very often. The company most able to exploit a piece of technology is the company that knows it best, which is the company that made it. And what we tend to find is that people who use open source technology in their business tend to benefit from it in rough proportion to the amount of contribution they have made to that product. So if you are the vast majority of the effort that goes into making something, you tend to be the vast majority to collect the vast majority of the value and benefit of that thing existing and operating in the world. We've seen that in so many places and so many industries over and over and over again, that we think it is an imperative. So when we see companies that are under investing in technology that they are benefiting a lot from, we go to them and we say, hey, you need to make this investment and we give them all the list of reasons why they should. And the answer is that if you are getting a lot of benefit out of something, getting more involved in the project will protect that benefit and help you grow it. So, whenever we see, you know, somebody comes into your ecosystem and really starts using your product, the first thing you want to do is start the conversation with them, where you say, hey, you are now dependent on this open source thing. And that produces a vulnerability for you at risk. And if you don't start contributing back in some way, you are at constant risk from the product no longer suiting your needs. And you suddenly not having a business anymore and you have to get involved in the development. Otherwise, what you have is a dependence on an outside vendor who isn't going to take care of your needs. So, you know, whatever someone says, oh, but what if somebody just kind of takes takes this thing and runs with it. I think that's unlikely. Very few businesses are capable of doing that and then there are exceptions to that absolute, but for the most part, that's not the concern. It doesn't happen very often.