 My name is Mark Ridge. I'm Chief Executive of My Society. My Society is a 15-year-old civic tech organization, and we operate in three different practice areas, Freedom of Information, Better Cities and Democracy. Over the past 12 months at My Society, we've been working on a number of new initiatives. Probably most significant is the work we've been doing to support journalism through our Freedom of Information practice. We've launched a new service called What Do They Know Professional and Alavatelli Professional, which is our international FOI service. And those services help journalists basically make more use of Freedom of Information to create more impactful, better evidenced articles and news stories. More broadly, that type of effort, you're specifically focusing on how can we identify individual audiences and support them with either new tools or adapting existing tools to better serve their needs, is certainly going to be a key part of what we do in the future. Within our democracy practice, we're expanding our work around every politician. Most significantly, we have decided to turn every politician around to really embrace wiki data and Wikipedia. The reasons for doing that are we can achieve much greater reach and much greater impact by supporting the efforts of these communal services rather than trying to entirely focus on our own efforts. So we can bring our technology skills, our understanding of data, our understanding of politics and power and influence, and we can help contribute to the wiki data project in turn that will have much greater reach, it will be much more complete. In our better cities practice, we're normally being focused on expanding FixMyStreet. In the past two years, really, we've created FixMyStreet Professional, and FixMyStreet Professional really is there to help local governments better manage issues and reports that are sent to them by citizens about non-emergency issues. And the critical element of this new service is we really help close the loop to make sure that these issues are actually dealt with and the status of those issues are reported back to citizens. By doing that, it's more likely citizens will be comfortable using these digital channels to make reports. But more importantly, the issues will actually be dealt with in a timely manner, and generally that will help the good relations between citizens and their local government. Over the next 12, 18 months, we're particularly keen at my society to consider how we can further contribute towards policy discussion around some of the practice areas that we operate within. You've been able to actually not just understand how our services contribute directly to getting things changed, but actually how we can contribute to the wider policy discussion to see more substantial changes at scale really taken up by governments around the world. That's a particularly challenging problem, but again, it's one that requires evidence, great case studies and a commitment to make those kind of changes. So if my society in a small way can contribute to those debates as well, I think we'll be doing a really good job.