 So how do you keep yourself up to date with ethical policies for publishing as well as taking care of ethical issues that arise during the process of publication? Yeah, so there are a number of good resources for publication ethics. So one is COPE, the Committee on Publication Ethics. They have a website, and it's fantastic for helping editors address ethics issues. And it's probably a good resource also for authors to look to see how journals should handle ethics issues. Because sometimes a problem could come up, and an author may not know whether they should contact the journal or contact the editor or whether the concern that they have really is a valid concern or something that should be made known to the journal. So the COPE website is a great resource. There's also a couple of blogs right now that monitor retractions. So Retraction Watch is one blog that I subscribe to. It keeps me up to date on famous authors as they become infamous for misconduct. I can keep an eye on whether any of these authors are active in our journals. There's also Pubp Peer, which is an online post-publication journal club as they describe it. But really what it does is if a reader has questions about anything within the manuscript, they can raise the question to the author and also inform the journal through the blog. And that's one way that we get informed that there is a concern about misconduct is if we get a message from Pubp Peer saying that someone has raised a concern. And there are also industry communities, Council for Science Editors, and also ISMTE, our organizations that raise the issues that other journals may be having within their departments. And it's a nice way to see that maybe we're having issues with authors failing to give us information about a certain aspect. If it's happening in other journals, then we can work together to find a way to make guidelines more clear or resources more accessible for our authors.