There's regulation everywhere and we are spending an increasing number of man hours working with regulators and the one thing I can say is at least regulations for Bitcoin miners are less than for the next year. But for the exchanges where they have 1000s of customers and know-your-customer is so critically important and In providing important and this investment advice, we're not in that game, we're a miner we're an utility in the sector, we frankly don't have any customers. So a lot of that goes away. So really, it's when it comes to regulation, it's about how are we going to get good power purchase agreements, how are we going to operate the country and operate profitably and then be consistent and keep that alive? In Quebec, for example, when there was a huge rush in 2018. And they put a moratorium on it. And with few exceptions, they haven't added really any more megawatts in that area. And we've now got a political new, fresh, provincial government there. We've got Hydro Quebec, that's got an agenda in terms of other sectors. So we're back into education and dealing and working with value-added situations to show our benefits to the province, we have close to 100 employees in Quebec with good well-paying jobs, educational opportunities for promotion. And we've given a lot back to the local areas. And so we've learned that we need to engage more just with the cities and towns in which we operate. And that's worked out really well for us, Washington, once again, it was educational, but less so they were more sort of used to data centers, Amazon and the like. So and we bought an existing facility. So there really wasn't a lot of red tape there. But we didn't meet really any senior people from that utility for a year, they weren't interested in meeting with us. Go down to South America. Argentina, is a very bureaucratic system. Just to set up bank accounts, you need a tax ID and I think the application process for that was about three and a half months, let alone getting power permits, and, and all the other things locally that we've had to do. We've been basically three years there now, two and a half. And we just got into production last September, and we're still ramping up, it takes a long time. And you have to have a lot of tenacity and be open. Paraguay, once again, you have to be open. But there is a more youthful energy there. It's not as bureaucratic. And I have that facility, we opened a 10-megawatt facility there in January of 22. We built that facility in less than four months, it was our cheapest place to build, it went up as fast as any other that I can remember, probably faster, and is a very efficient operation there. Paraguay represents an area that we would really like to expand, and they've had publicly some issues getting a Bitcoin law through, it's not illegal right now. But they haven't really made it legal yet. So we haven't been able to open a bank account there. Because it's not legal, but it's not illegal. So every area represents its own challenges. And we spend a lot of time and effort in each of those areas. In South America, you have to be careful of some of their customs involves facilitation payments and things like that. And you need to stay away from that. I don't I, myself, nor anybody else in the company wants to spend any jail time. But you know, if you want to accelerate things down there, a payment here or there, from what I have heard, will take you a long way. And as a NASDAQ TSX company, you don't do it that way. We'll, we'll ask we'll run away if need be. But we've seen opportunities like that, and the whole company knows don't do that. Now, your other question was about Europe. We've looked at Sweden and Norway, as well as a couple other areas a little further back in time. Were not scared to go there. Norway was looking pretty good. And then they put undersea cables over to Europe. And when they were started running out of natural gas, the price went up to doubled and tripled. And we just didn't find it reliable, economic, reliable and economic proposition to go into the type of places we were looking to Norway. Sweden is an area that we were looking at, as well. But now there's a real political movement against the miners, it seems data centers, and now they're talking about implementing a pretty prohibitive tax on on your electricity there as well for just people in our sector. And it's prejudicial, but that's what they're proposing. So I hear there's a couple sort of loopholes but you don't make hundreds of millions of dollars of capital investment decisions based on a possible loophole. So we're gonna have to see that through but we'd like to go to Europe, but none of the opportunities is just upsized up. Yeah, we're very careful with that.