Absolutely. Stripe's mission, as we describe it publicly, is to increase the GDP of the Internet. Maybe that's a bit arcane, but that's the core idea we're trying to get across as we want to help businesses increase their revenue.
Because Stripe was first designed for online businesses, we think a lot about that particular context, and the simplest and most powerful thing we do to help online businesses increase their revenue is help them accept more payment methods from around the world.
Most people who pay online in Sweden, for example, use a payment method called Swish. It's not an easy thing for a Canadian small business to go and call up the Swish people and figure out how to integrate it, and so on. Presumably, if you're running an online business selling to customers around the world, you want to support customers in as many markets as possible, so Stripe makes it really easy with just a couple of lines of code, a bit of work in an afternoon, to accept customers and accept payments from a global customer base in all of the different currencies and payment methods.
Obviously, we—