 This one's anonymous, so it must be an ugly question. They don't want to put their name to it. Can I set someone as a delegate in Microsoft 365, that is external to my organization? No. Yeah. So, no. Thank you very much. We're done here. No. No. One of the challenges is you're dealing with an external party that you want to have as a delegate for maybe they're a virtual assistant, for example. I see it, it comes up all the time. They go, I've got a virtual assistant and I want them to be a delegate, but they got their own email address. It's like, well, no, this is a secure tenant. So it's not like you can just give someone those kind of rights to be your administrator over your account or you're over. That's a very different. They need to have their own email address that's within your tenant so they can physically get in and be assigned a delegate. All licenses, yep. Yes. So you're going to need the license card. E3 license for like $5 to $6 a month. Yeah. If it's worth it, if somebody is going to help you manage your counter, is it worth that $6? Yes. Probably. Yeah. Yeah. And remember it's not you don't need to have the E5. They're not looking at those advanced services. That's right. Maybe you want them to have that. Maybe, I mean, are you, if you're rolling out co-pilot and you want everybody to have co-pilot, somebody who's working as a virtual assistant will get a lot of value out of having the co-pilot capabilities. It's one of the best features about it is meeting summaries and email summaries and going through and I do it. So yes, you need to go and license that. No, you cannot have an external person managing your calendar. Yeah. And delegate rights, it's just like on top of that, is it your accountant that needs to have access to particular files? For example, what's the type of delegate that you're actually looking at? Because we can have all sorts of types of delegates in our world and businesses that we might work with. And can they just have access and set them up in Teams so they can have access to a particular SharePoint site with information you can have conversations around? Because no delegate can get classes a lot of different things. Delegate in our world is often someone that's doing administration rights on your behalf. When it comes to calendar is what we've known traditionally as a delegate, but I'm seeing that word used in lots of different ways. These, you know, I have to delegate this to and delegate to this person. And but if we're talking the outlook side, the license, if we're talking another external party doing another type of outsourcing, you know, you can set them up, collaborate in teams and give them rights over certain things. Well, and you can also that person, you're yes, you're giving them licenses, they have access to do those things. You can lock everything else down. You can make it very restrictive. And so, you know, that they don't, they're not able to go in and use, you know, whatever it is, maybe they're only living inside of exchange and outlook and doing your calendaring and responding to email on your behalf. But they're not in, you probably want to leave Teams access open, but they can't create, you know, SharePoint sites. I mean, there's a lot that you can lock down. Yeah. And then you could also go in and watch, create a user type and watch that user very closely to make sure that their behavior is consistent with what you expect for that role and they're not doing things. You get alerts if they are downloading extensive content to a OneDrive, for example. Mm-hmm, right. Yep.