 Ashik has a question here. Can you restrict editing access for certain columns of a SharePoint online list? Some users should have full access. Some others should be able to edit or view only certain allowed columns. Yes. The short answer is no. Microsoft should have done this two decades ago, in my opinion. The same thing is having secured views by different ones. But yeah, if they have access to the item, they have access to the item that you can't change those columns. However, you can, using content types, hide and show columns from a form so they wouldn't be able to see it. So if you create content types and only display in the content type, the ones that they should be able to see or edit, that might be a workaround. You could do that or you could create a view. I mean, if it's different for different people, but if you have constituencies, you can always go and create a view for those constituencies. So again, you're not locking them out. It's just the same thing here. They're just not seeing the other columns that they shouldn't have access to. Right. But then if they go and edit the item, they're still going to see those values unless they're a content type. Right. So that's a little bit different. The only way to go old school and go back, do your Excel and lock columns really, it's really about going backwards if they really got to have that. But yeah, that doesn't solve it. It's more hopefully lists will come forward. There are some third-party tools that have figured it out though. So that's why I'm curious why Microsoft SharePoint team hasn't been able to do that because I can name two that have asked me to do demos for them that do do that. They allows them to secure a column, to create secured views based on the role in the list, not out of the box with SharePoint. So you're saying you don't want to name those other products? I was going to say, I'd like to know. Well, I'm not sure if we wanted to. Does AppPoint have a product that does that? I have no idea. I'm not sure yet. So the other one is Quizcom. Quizcom does that. They've got a great tool that does a lot more, gives you a lot more capability within your lists than out of the box. I get nothing for telling you that. No monetary compensation for mentioning them. But yeah, I can't remember the other one on top of my head.