 For some exemptions, the decision is considered to be absolute and that means generally, there are exceptions, these are not subject to a public interest test to decide if the information should be released. And the most common absolute exemption that you'll see in the wild, so the ones that won't be subject to a public interest test, are section 21, which is information that is already in the public domain, or a section 12 exemption, which is that the cost limit would be exceeded. Oh, it will cost us too much to find this information. So we're going to reject this request and not give you any information at all. We don't subject that to a public interest test because there is a limit to the amount of cost that authority has to bear by answering an FRI request. If they say that this is exceeded, then they don't have to perform a public interest test.