 If you're a home seller, a home buyer, then you will be pleased to know, I guess, that you know how when you sell a buyer house, the realtors basically say, look, there's a 6% commission, 3% on the buyer, 3% on the seller, and that's just the way it is. That's how all realtors agree to that. The realtors association has basically mandated that for all realtors, and this is how we run things, and it's 6%. And I think I've negotiated down a little bit from that in California because there was huge numbers of realtors. They were just everywhere, and you could get a little bit of competition going, but generally, there's no competition in this space. The 6% has just been how it is, and it's been like this for decades. Well, anyway, people have sued. They've sued, sadly, under antitrust laws. Now, I think that's always bad to use those kind of laws, but in this case, the National Association of Realtors, in a sense, has a government grant and monopoly, right? They, you have to be a licensed realtor to sell, to be a licensed realtor. I think you have to be a member of the National Association of Realtors, and National Association of Realtors, which represents a million realtors, has now agreed in a settlement in court versus a group of homeowners. They've agreed basically to pay $418 million of damages, and they've agreed to eliminate rules on commissions. That is, they are going to allow commissions to float. Commissions will be whatever. You as a home buyer, a home seller, negotiate with your realtor. They've also agreed to a bunch of changes to the rules, and so expect kind of a different dynamic when you're buying and selling a home moving forward. I think this will create, indeed, more competition. It'll create more options in terms of buyers and sellers, and it's going to be fun, and it's going to be interesting to watch, right? People expect estimates, expect commissions to drop maybe 25 to 50%. That's a lot of money. A million dollar home, a commission was $60,000. $60,000 in a million dollar home. If it drops to 30,000, and the buyers and sellers are saving 30,000, that's a lot of money. So, yeah, I'm excited. I think this is good. I expect to be buying, selling in the future, and I'm happy to pay less to realtors. I'm not sure they added 6% of value, and certainly in a competitive market, it just seems like every home in California is a million dollar home, it's $60,000. 30,000 to each side. Does that really make sense? They do $30,000 worth of work. Now, one of the things that will happen is, commissions will go down. The number of retailers, realtors will go down because it won't be as profitable, and commissions will probably creep up again, so they probably won't go back to 6%, but while you might see a big drop early on, you're probably not gonna see a big drop later on, right? You'll probably see a big drop early on, but I doubt that you would see, I think a lot of that will bounce back, so I don't think you're gonna see it drop to 3%. I think you'll probably see 4%, 5% ultimately settle after there is, in a sense, a lot of realtors will leave the profession, so we'll see how that plans out.