 It's the network. Sweet. So we're going to start off with Spotify. And the first thing I want to talk about is the fact that they removed the listen account from the discovered on playlist on desktop, which I think is a very disappointing thing to close out. Yeah. There's so many interesting arguments I hear about this. What is your perspective? So from one perspective, I can understand, you know, it's supposed to be like, normally use it so much maybe because obviously it's not on mobile. But, and also they're thinking it's probably going to stop like the fake playlist so much. But I actually think that by taking away this, you lose transparency. So if I'm looking at, if I'm trying to picture a playlist, a smaller playlist, and I can see smaller artists, I know that that place is probably going to come up on their profile. And if the amount of listens is not correlating to the actual number of followers, then I know it's not a good playlist. I won't have that option anymore to check. Right. And that's the interesting thing, man, because it's all about who are you trying to serve at the end of the day. All right. We can say, hey, this platform is for consumers, it's not necessarily for artists in that way. We use artists to serve consumers, but it's not necessarily for artists. So it does make things interesting, right? Because you want to please artists to the extent that you can serve them to the consumers. But at the end of the day, they try to, this is one of those politic things where you use an argument that sounds like you're doing good, really to also take more control over the platform and eliminate some of your competition. Because each third party playlist is a real thing, right? They're useful, but you take away some of the utility from the artists. Like you say, like it makes it a lot harder to understand how do I take advantage of this playlist? Which ones do I want to get on? And I know they say that it helps more so with making sure that people are focused on the quality of playlists and not gaming numbers and things of that nature. But really it just makes it, I don't really find a world where it's actually better for anybody. No, it's annoying because obviously it doesn't make any difference at all to bigger artists, because obviously numbers are going to be big. But for independent artists and smaller artists, it's a big difference, especially as a lot of artists are tweeting out that it's a really valuable free marketing tool. And there aren't many of those around. They're actually free and it's useful to everyone. Yeah, yeah. I mean, to me though, at the end of the day, I go in over thinking because look, if you see, you can still see the type of playlist that certain artists on all. And so you can still reach out to a playlist of artists that you're listening to and things like that's one route, right? If I'm, if I'm listening to artists, I go to similar artists, I can see what playlist of music has been picked up on. So I'll just go reach out to those playlists and make sense. You know, you can tell still it is owned by Spotify or not. So there's still that path of kind of understanding the quality of a playlist, which is more how you want to be looking at playlists anyway, but there's still paths to get there. And then you can utilize other sites like chart metric to maybe you're paying for, you know, the professional premium account to start to get an feel of which of these you pretty much see the exact same stats. So every day in the spot of it, five is taken and more on chart metric. So that's still there. You just have to get some more money. Exactly. The important things for this are that usually you would go on the desktop on Spotify and you go on the artist profile and you would see the five top players there on. You no longer have to see the listeners count. You still have to see the playlist. And also this doesn't impact Spotify varieties at all. You'd be able to see all the players you're on yourself when you're on account. It doesn't affect that. You'd have to see what players you're on and how you listen to your music. It's just on the front end for, you know, the general consumer, general user. You can access it. Yeah. I mean, in that vein, I might actually slip. I mean, I could at least understand in that instance, because if they're trying to say that they don't want people to follow a playlist based off of social proof, they want people to follow a playlist based off of whether they like the playlist. Is that what they're trying to say? Well, maybe, but it doesn't go far enough because to do that, they would remove the followers count from the playlist altogether, wouldn't they? They're going to do that. Well, you're saying the consumer wouldn't see the playlist though, right? They'll have to see the playlist. They just can't see the number of listeners it's got on those top five playlists. Well, that's what I'm saying. They won't see your argument is that it wouldn't just be that the consumers can't see the follower account. You'd think that if they really care, they wouldn't let anybody see the follower account? Yeah, I think so. Because obviously, everyone can see at the moment, they can see the number of followers a player has got. But what you want to know is how people actually listen to that playlist and removing this takes that away to some extent. It's just the listeners that are more important than the followers. They have to be engaged. I don't, I actually, I disagree with that because I think that if the consumer, they should be focused on whether they or whether they like a playlist or not, nothing more than that. But on the back end, there is still utility. If I have a playlist, I'm going to be able to know how many people are following my playlist because I can judge other metrics. There's a lot of reasons for me to understand that. So I wouldn't say, I don't know, just like anything, right? There's a lot of websites that don't allow you to have an insight on the front end because it's not too easy to experience that allows you to see a lot more deeper into it on the back end because there's all these functions to it. So the other point I made, the other point I made on the newsletter was that, oh my God, this was just on desktop. It wasn't on mobile apps, which is the main way that Spotify is used anyway. Therefore, will it make much of a difference? Now that part, yeah. Now that part brings things at the question. Like, what are you doing or why are you going? If you, you know, why are you going about this way? Because as you said, it's used mostly on mobile. So what's the point of just doing it on one or not or not the other? I guess we have to wait to see for this one. But if there's just a sign of things to come, we're always going to find on a different way around to do whatever we need to do.