 One night, I was sitting with Harold Cohen, the painter, and we had had a glass of wine or two. And he said, Pamela, why were you drawn to artificial intelligence? And I gave him the usual, you know, the most interesting people I know were doing it, which was true. My smartest people I knew were doing it. What an exceptional thing it is going to be if it works. And we think it feels a lot more like it's going to work now than it did 20 years ago. And then something popped out of me, which was totally unconscious. And that was, and I think it will put an end to the masculine hegemony in intelligence generally. I thought, did that come out of my mouth? Yeah, it did. And yeah, it was true. And oh, I was wrong. But I didn't know that at the time because we still had hopes that the machine would somehow be disinterested in a way that humans are not disinterested. And that is my great disappointment with AI right now, that it isn't making a more even playing field.