, and finnion objected. and the king of ireland said that columba the copier, had to give his copy of the salter back to finnion, and this was his reasoning: to every cow belongs its calf. so to every book belongs its copy. [laughter] and this was, this was about 500 a.d. and remember, i said the first copyright act is 1710, all right? so we've got a long time from this one dispute that historians have been able to find before we have formal copyright legislation. and, in fact, people who know more than i do about the history of copyright law have said that at no time during our manuscript period did anyone assert an author's copyrights. that's a long time. that started to change with the last great, you know, one of the last historical, technological innovations, and that was the movable type printing press. that's guttenberg. it is the -- and, you know, the impact of guttenberg was enormous. and, you know, you always hear that i'm somebody who likes numbers, and, you know, if you can -- that's why i put to