 So I'm Richard Sever. I'm co-founder of the Preprint Service Bio Archive and Met Archive, and I'm Assistant Director of Cold Spring Hubber Laboratory Press at Cold Spring Hubber Laboratory. Well, I think it's important because we know that content resides in a number of different places with different functionalities across the web and students need to be able to navigate between these different locations and have a common experience so that they can integrate them in their learning. So any initiative that increases interoperability ensures that people have a common experience and facilitates moving between these necessarily distinct locations online seems like a good idea to me. So we already know that students are using our content for journal clubs and also for kind of undergraduate learning Bio Archive Preprints are appearing in curricula that lecturers are giving their students. So we, and we're already integrating discussion from elsewhere on the web around Bio Archive. So we've kind of really, we've always been interested in this notion of content about content. And I think that's where this kind of like social learning fits. So any initiative that is about making better accessibility and better interoperability of content about content is gonna be of interest to us. Well, we already have a dashboard on Bio Archive which launches and allows readers to discover and read this content about content, content coming in from a variety of sources that has discussions and evaluations of papers. Now that's currently mainly for expert readers, other researchers, but you can imagine that if more and more students are reading papers in this way that such a dashboard could also integrate educational resources pointing to the content. So that you would be pointed to and be able to discover not only what other researchers are saying but what kind of teaching groups are saying about the content. Well, I think I would say, I mean, you just think about how the web has operated since its inception. You know, whatever you have on your website it is only gonna be one of many websites that your users are visiting. And if you can have a common experience if there's an easy way to move between these different sites and they're interoperable then your users are gonna like coming to you because it makes sense to them. So to me, it seems like a natural extension of the way the web should work. And we already have a variety of web standards. You know, everybody uses HTML and this just seems like a natural extension of that to provide a common experience and a better user experience across content that resides in a whole bunch of different buckets that are owned by a whole bunch of different people.