don't have the assets that they want. Is there a gray area here? — Yeah. I mean, that's just gross negligence. — Okay. Yeah. Like a different — It sounds like there's no there's less gray area and it's actually kind of binary. — Yeah. I mean, it's like you can look at Pitchbook, a bunch of there's a bunch of resources out there and ways to get access to cap tables and whatever that you should be using if you're direct to the seller. — Um, in the event that you're getting a seller and you didn't do the due diligence for your buyer or whoever your client is, that's just gross negligence. You shouldn't be doing that. — Sure. Um, in the event that you know you're buying from someone that's a well-known name that has cap table access, you've reviewed the legal docs and then they still do something shifty. That's different, but that's also like you get what you get. It is a reputation business and the people that are kind of shifty in the business are known. — Sure. — Okay. So, when so like we're going to talk about what happens when Anthropic actually IPOs and these shares become liquid and like a lot of this stuff settles. Um, but it doesn't sound like there is any like if there is like missing shares, it's because somebody was a bad person and they explicitly decided to like do fraud or a scam or g gross negligence at the very least. And so there's no it doesn't sound like there's any sort of like accidental way to cause harm. There are just explicitly bad actors who are taking advantage of frothy money. Is that — Yeah, it's mainly bad actor. The other thing is like take for example forwards. The way the US legal system works is you're innocent until proven guilty. So the problem with the forward is say someone sold their anthropic shares at a 20 billion valuation. Uh and say they sold like it for a million and now it's at you know a trillion — that's a 50x that's worth $50 million. There's a real calculus to be able to be made of like, hey, you know, I can sell this for $50 million. Even if this lawsuit costs me $10 million, I'm going to have $40 million. — I see. — They have to prove it in court. A lot of people won't do that. So, that's also a risk. Um, and that's like that's what I think is going to be interesting is like probably there's going to be some legal precedent of if someone enters into a deal that was illegal by the bylaws um or the charter of the company, but you know they were acting by that contract like the person got paid. Right. — What happens probably what happens is my gut instinct is that person is personally liable. Um but we'll see. — Yeah. And then the outcomes could be different like personally liable for the full amount or just do they get their money back. — All of these things will be facts and circumstances. — Yeah. Because if in the chance that this person is — and it depends on the contract they sign, right? Like if the contract's not properly written, then you could be in trouble, which is a problem because a lot of the people that are doing this don't have uh lawyers looking at their docs. It's chatbt, — right? — Or claude. — Okay. So, I think we've done a good job kind of like illuminating how fraud comes into the market or how just the example that you just gave where somebody just like renegs on a deal. I don't know if that's fraud. I don't know what that is, but it's not great. Um, and but there's like a lot — contract. — Yeah. You would have never thought 2 years ago that you could soon be trading tokenized oil on MetaMask, but here we are. I've been using MetaMask since 2017, and we all remember buying NFTs with it in 2021. 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