
Yeah, definitely. I would say it's not just incentivizing care, it is also assisting and augmenting care because it is like very energy and time consuming to do care work. And a facilitator, like realistically, cannot facilitate 450 people at once, even if they really care a lot. There's some wetware limitations to the amount of care you can put as a facilitator to a conversation. And so think of — like for personal care, sometimes if you want to move people who are heavy and so on, you can use an exoskeleton that does not automate away your work, but allow you to lift better weights. You can also think of Cortico and similar conversation network plurality technologies like exo-cortex, that helps somebody who performs care work like facilitation to make sense of more people or to close the loop slightly faster, but it's not replacing the care workers.