 Stephanie asked the question. This will go into some of what Jackie was asking. Stephanie says, Microsoft announced new personal pricing for co-pilot and also lowered the number of users required for the enterprise edition. I'm still not sure of the differences between versions, but the real concern is how co-pilot interacts with older versions of Office. Do we need to be on the latest versions of all software to take advantage of co-pilot? It's a great question. Karawana and her team yesterday did a whole live stream and a presentation on the different SKUs and the purposes and which license for what. There's personal co-pilot, there's the enterprise co-pilot. It was very informative. I thought it was a really good, clear model of what to expect from which one. The fact that the personal one doesn't leverage any enterprise level, the co-pilot model is not being fed by business information. That's within your security for your tenant. There was a lot of questions about that. It's like, if we turn on co-pilot for our business, are you using that for the people out in the rest of the world to feed and teach your model? They're like, no, they're separate. Just like you have two separate logins for the personal Microsoft accounts, which are like your Outlook, MSI and all those accounts versus your enterprise accounts, that same security wall exists for the data. I believe it was recorded. I'll see if I can find the link for that. But it was a very, very good clear session and demystified a lot of things for me personally because I had the same question. When you read the documentation about the minimum requirements for co-pilot, you do need to be on the, I think it's called the current channel or the current release for the Office 365 apps. The desktop apps physically need to get updated to have co-pilot tooling in it. So yes, you have to have the licensing. You have to go from O365 to M365. Then once you have that, then you can go for the co-pilot license. The apps are an issue, then you can use the Cloud versions of the applications. It still has co-pilot functionality inside of it. Yeah, and just to add to something Shira was saying about the segmentation. Even in the enterprise version, the data that you'll see or the co-pilot will use to assist you when you're generating content or asking questions. It respects all of the permission models, all of the things like labeling, all of the information barriers. So if Norm, for example, was to make a query in a tenant that we shared and I'd information barrier protected some data from a group that he was in, that data would not be used to perform the result of the response that he would ask the question for. So it's very well segmented in that space. The key here too around this, and this is where governance comes in, is it respects permissions. It doesn't respect views. So if there have been people that have been using, they can't see it so they don't have access as permissions. They may be in a world of hurt when they go to use co-pilot because it will present information to them that they didn't know is there. So this is a good opportunity for people to go out and look at their permissions and make sure that their permissions are set up properly. So putting my Microsoft hat on, SharePoint Premium oversharing, oversharing the new things that we're releasing with SharePoint Premium. I'm not a salesman but just go look at that. The oversharing links and the oversharing features we have in there, and the advanced management dashboards will help you in this space. Taking my salesman half right now. Yeah. These are good things to be talking about for an organization that is investing all of their information assets into a platform like SharePoint Office 365. It is important to know that you might have overshared content that you might have things that are not governed the way that you expect it. But let's not forget a lot of us, a lot of organizations rushed to the cloud when the pandemic hit. Some shortcuts in a traditional governance sense had to have been taken. So now's a great time to clean up. It's never too late. It's not about fear mongering. There's probably more opportunity with co-pilot than people realize for personal productivity. So I think it's a good thing that people are willing to consider their exposure. I remember when I first experienced Delve and I could see things that I had no idea I had access to, but it was a great opportunity to start remediation, and I think co-pilot is going to do that for a lot of organizations. Well, yeah, the oversharing reports and the advanced sharing reports. It was previously Syntex, now SharePoint Advanced Management. Definitely worth a look. They'll definitely help any organization understand where their sharing is getting out of control. So I use those tools as part of like a quarterly maintenance assessment for clients so that they have an understanding that things are being shared that shouldn't be and who they're shared with. So I love those. And we're adding a whole bunch of new features to that over the next quarter. So watch out for those. One thing I do know is don't wait until you've done all your data remediation and clean up and all those things, because people are constantly putting information in. You're never going to be able to sweep everything under the rug. It might get exposed. You just got to do constant work, get started, do it right now and see what's broken and fix it. Because if you're going to wait, you'll never get there. Garbage and garbage out, right? Invest in governance. Just invest in governance now and training around it. And what does that look like with security training and sharing and get your end users on the journey? Teach them how to use it so you can get a return on your investment because I've seen it where if they're just doing even some of the basics, they were getting a little stuck. So you're just going to need to invest a little bit of time on top of it. And then you're going to get a lot out of it in terms of productivity from the end user, let alone all of the technical side of it and the benefits it's going to bring. Look at the ROI world we're identifying for these past questions. Yeah. A couple of comments here, Jackie. One, there's no hyphen, it's just a few words. I mean, that is akin to spelling SharePoint with a lower case P. So just be aware of that, Jackie. I don't want people just judging you. You're asking a valid question out there. The second thing I would add is, yes, it's taking over the world. It's everything. It's everywhere.