 Shelby asks this. Hello. I'm a middle school teacher and I'm having trouble with my students. But wait, there's more going to our team's homepage and starting their own meetings. This is leading to a lot of meetings being held without me even knowing is there a way I can set our channel to where I'm the only one who can start and hold a meeting. Yes. Most likely, by default, this is turned off for your students. Or, you know, it's turned off, but there's, there are policies around teams where you can set this or who can start X type of a meeting. And who can't, who can view who can share who can do all those types of things. And most likely in your organization, yours is set a certain way and your policy just needs adjusted. And there was a discussion yesterday about the educational version of teams and the student roles and things like that, which. Yeah, you might want to make conclusions of their question. Always good to talk about a recording that happened on another day that's separate from from this, but. Yeah. Yeah, it's, but this is something where I know that we had, you know, Max on who knew a bit more about the education version of teams. And so, you know, is anybody spent any time with the edu version Stacy you have. Yeah, so I've got like three colleges that I do work with and by default, the settings are not what you think they are being conducive for a student. Right. Or, or even a teacher, honestly, right. They, they literally need you to go in there and set it to what you need it to be. So it is not what you think it should be from an edu standpoint. So it's something you need to go in there and review on how you want to do things. You can set like, you know, policies. Hey, teachers put them in a group, right. Teachers do this. And this is the permissions that they have. You know, everybody else does this, i.e. students, right. They're probably in another group. This is what students can do. You literally have to go out there and configure that because by default it is not going to work how you think or most teachers would think it should work. So you have to go out there and actually look at it and then configure it to your needs because you're going to want to create groups that have your professors, teachers, whatever you want to call them in it. You can do the same thing with your students so that you can segregate those policies so that everybody can do what they need to do. Any other thoughts on that before we. I saw Norm agree with me. I'm just going to go with it. Yeah. You're right. Education is different. There's more controls. There's more tools. And my experience was when we had it rolled out through our university. Is that our account rep made sure that we were following the best practice guidance so it didn't get to the point where the teacher was scrambling around to put in those safeguards to protect the classroom experience. And I'm going to go back to those default settings with any tenant, depending if they're edu, gcc, commercial or whatever, you have to visit them and base them off of what your needs are. And edu is no different. And the reason why is because they need you to set up those groups so you can identify certain types of users from others. Just an observation, but when we've handled some of these edu questions, there seems to be, again, just my observation that a lot of the questions are stemming from people not adhering to those best practices and those outlines of those steps. They're going and maybe they're taking knowledge of teams or SharePoint or whatever it is in the commercial sector and trying to do something the same way in edu. And some of these problems have just been solved for the student-teacher relationship and collaboration. And so a lot of the controls are in place if you follow the right steps. And it's very interesting because we're using these tools from a commercial perspective. We're meeting professionally to talk about the business that we do. The paradigm is completely different in the school. This is a tool of social engagement in some levels. And you wouldn't let two students alone in the shop room or the kitchen area unattended with access to all of these different pieces of equipment that can hurt each other. So you wouldn't do the same thing inside of a virtual environment where cyber-bullying, inappropriate conversations, whatever the case might be. But it's incumbent upon those education IT stakeholders to make sure that they are following that because this is where it's different. It's not about adoption. It's adoption and safeguarding. And policies, right? Because not only do you have to have groups to identify your students from your teachers, from management and all that kind of stuff within the organization, but also are you going to allow your students to have their own meetings? If you're going to allow them to have their own meetings, what are your safeguards around bullying? Hey, well, we're going to demand it's automatically recorded. We're going to have a transcription so someone can go through it, all those types of things, right? So you can still have those meetings where the teacher doesn't have to be involved in it all the time. But having those safeguards, you can go back and review them when she has time or he has time to say, hey, there's an issue because there's some bullying going on, right? So you have to decide what's right for your organization, but you have to go look at it. Microsoft has made huge strides in, I don't know if you guys see, I spent a lot of time in the admin center, but there's a thing where we can go to settings. So when you get a tenant now, they have started a list of things that you need to configure once you have a tenant, right? I think it's very short changed. It needs beefed up. But those are those types of things, especially depending on the type of organization it is, these are things that you need to go to do. Otherwise, you're going to have issues regardless. If you don't go visit these things. I think Microsoft is on the right track. They, to me, I think they need to speed that up a little bit because a lot of organizations, depending on what they are, struggle initially because they don't know they need to go configure that stuff. Well, and some of that configuration still requires PowerShell and some people are not comfortable with PowerShell. Exactly. They need the checkboxes and specific instructions on how to do these things and how it can affect things. I'm with you there. I think that is the other piece of that. A lot of times they do not tell you, you have to go Bing or Google, whatever your choice is, right? And find out, hey, is this actually an admin setting I can set or do I have to have PowerShell to do it? It would be nice to know inside the configuration, hey, you've got to have PowerShell access so that you know how to route it quickly to get it done, right? I would love to see that distinguished setting there as well. It would be nicer if they route it to write the PowerShell to do it. Yeah, the whole login thing, permissions, you know. Yeah. And what roles are required for running that might be something that's important too. And skill set, honestly, I've got to tell you, unless you're skilled in PowerShell, don't give someone access to do it because you can cause a lot of damage and not even know. You know, there's a whole difference between get and do, right? And, you know, and all that kind of stuff. So you have to have some skill set there. So I, you know, I go back to just like, I mean, Sherry, I mean, I'm sure you agree, like, you know, end users versus power users. You're not going to give them more permissions that they can shoot themselves in the foot. Same thing with PowerShell or to the admin center, et cetera, right? Yeah, and I'm a PowerShell scaredy cat. I just don't. I don't like it. I don't want to. It's because I only know what have to be dangerous and I know that. Know your limitations.