 NSF now requires a data management plan to be part of every grant proposal. And what they want to know or what types of data are you going to be collecting and what kind of physical collections, what kind of software are you going to generate and things of that sort. So they want to know in the data management plan what kind of data you're going to be obtaining. Secondly, what standards are used for the data and the metadata that you gather and what's the format going to be for these data. And they want to know what policies you will have for access of the data. For most data sets, the data will be just entirely available to the public. However, you can imagine circumstances where data have names associated with them or health records or something of that sort, which really can't be made available to the general public. Certain aspects of the data can be, but not. They can't be linked back to individuals and things of that sort. And they want to know what will be your policies for sharing the data and giving access to the public for these data and what are the policies for reusing the data, redistributing the data and production of derivatives from the data and things of that sort. And how are you going to archive the data or your research samples or the photographs you take through the electron microscope or whatever means you are gathering your data. And how are you going to preserve these data in a way that will be accessible into the future?