 Now, when you don't do this, then you kind of get to the big scary plagiarism word. You can kind of stray into that territory. Now, a lot of plagiarism is not actually malicious. It's not something where somebody has necessarily done it intentionally. There's plenty of accidental plagiarism that happens, and you could have a whole discussion about plagiarism if we wanted to. We're not going to do that right now. But it comes from the Latin plagiarist, meaning, and I probably did not pronounce that correctly, but it means kidnapper. If you think about the definition of plagiarism, copying or closely imitating the work of another writer, composer, or etc., without permission and with the intention of passing the results off as original work, then, and by the way, it comes from Reitz. I have the source quote cited down in the lower right-hand corner. It's like stealing the ideas that others have nurtured and brought into the world. It's really much like stealing their baby, their idea, the thing that they have kind of worked on. You kind of think about it as you wouldn't want somebody else to kind of kidnap your ideas. In turn, you want to make sure that you're not going to be kidnapping anybody else's ideas.