 Wicker is an app that spies use to send self-destructing messages. Seriously, spies don't use iMessage. Wicker's technology is strong enough to be used by activists fighting dictators every day, but easy enough for you to use to send all of your messages. My daughters have fun sending pictures, videos and messages to their friends throughout the day. With other social media apps, privacy policies all the same, you're granting ownership and control of your private conversations and media to a large corporation that makes money off of big data. Wicker is unique in that you own and control everything that you do on our service. We don't have the keys and we don't know who you are. No one else can save us. Since Wicker doesn't know anything about our users, we can't make money off of selling user data. As such, we had to develop a new business model, selling useful services. This business model was not possible a decade ago, but it will dominate the decade to come. Who doesn't want control over their baby pictures and their conversations with their mother? This is why Wicker is the most trusted communication platform in the world, serving millions of top secret messages every day to customers in over 198 countries. Innovation is about doing something that's never been done before. It's about doing something that has a significant impact on the world. Wicker is innovative because it's more than just the most secure app in the world. We're a platform. This platform enables large companies to exchange all kinds of messages, including financial transactions. But now that we've served over a billion messages, we're aiming to secure the world's financial transactions. As billions more join us online, the borders we experience in the offline world are crushed. In order to have a strong global society, everyone no matter if frontier must have private communication, uncensored information, control and ownership of their assets. This is what we call the private web. This mission was inspired by the reason George Washington founded the U.S. Post Office. He believed, as I do, that providing these basic human rights is how we build a strong society. This is how we have evolution instead of revolution as we all become connected. The public web that has been built over the past decade with companies like Facebook and Google are a huge step for humans and society. Now we must spend the next decade building out the private web so we can have a balanced system. We at Wicker are at the forefront of the private web, and we invite you to join us.