 I'm from Nepal. I'm from Iraq. I'm coming from India. I'm from Byron, New Jersey. I live in Birmingham, England. Chicago, Illinois. I'm from La Paz, Bolivia. I'm from Nairobi, Kenya. I'm from Malaysia. I'm from Milan, Italy. I'm from South Africa. I'm from Poland. I'm from Japan. I'm from Armenia. I'm from Brazil. I'm from Russia. I'm from Botswana. I'm from Israel. I'm from Pakistan. I'm from Hong Kong. I'm from Istanbul. I'm from Mexico. I'm from Tennessee. At the beginning of my joining to PDA in 2008, I started many articles. One of them I think it was about a lady called Maryam Noor. We didn't have an article about it. So this was my first article. So I forget about it. Maybe two or three years later, I passed by this article. I was shocked. More than 100,000 people read this article. They used it. So they got their information from this article. They passed by this article. So you feel like you affected and influenced more than 100,000 people. I was just so terrified when I pushed the edit button for the first time. I thought, oh my God, I'm going to ruin everything. That can't work. I can't do it. Wikipedia is an open source where everyone can throw in his or her idea. And then somebody else comes in and polishes on that idea to make it superb. There are thousands of people working every day, every hour, every minute on Wikipedia to improve it. A lot of it is devolunteerism. This is a unique way to volunteer. It brings together both professionals and amateurs who have a love for a particular topic. The people who had different opinions in the beginning start to collaborate. A lot of what you would assume a large internet corporation would handle is handled by volunteers like me. You just can't say, okay, I'm right, you're wrong, this is my version of the article. If there's an issue of bias, then somebody has probably flagged it. And if not, now I can flag it too. You've got hundreds and thousands of people seeing that and correcting it. And then I pushed the button and bam, the journey started and it was great. First time started with the probability. The first article I have started is probability. One of my main articles I wrote on Wikipedia was the article on stab wounds. I write about fly fishing, Montana history, National Park history, Yellowstone. And they utilize crops. Chess players. Biodiversity. Military history topics. Armenian history. Roman history. Judges. Communication. Biographies. Football. Ireland. Pennsylvania. Mostly photography. Pink Floyd. Baking because I love to bake. Nuclear weapons and radioactivity and whitewater kayaking. There's all this information that's out there that's kind of scattered. And we're putting it together in one place. We are offering free knowledge for everyone in their own language so they can use it. Everyone is benefited by this, whether they are rich or poor. For-profit companies have different motivations and different requirements. From the Wikimedia Foundation, I don't take a salary and I also don't even take expenses. I think it's very important that I'm able to say quite clearly, Look, when I'm asking you for money, I'm not asking you for money for myself. I'm asking you for money for the Foundation, which is the team who supports this amazing community that I'm a part of. I think Wikimedia gave me this chance to really make a huge difference in the world. It's like an investment for your future, for your children's future.