 Drones for Humanity is a social venture aimed at using a system of heavy lifting, rapidly deployable and highly intelligent drones to deliver humanitarian aid. Through our research, we have found that only 20 percent of survivors of a natural disaster in third world countries receive aid in the golden 48-hour window following a natural disaster, that is with a conventional system of helicopters and trucks. In addition to the loss of life, injury is exacerbated by the delay in receiving treatment. This prevents people from getting back to work and thus making the economic conditions of an already devastated nation much worse. Our drones, on the other hand, are designed to deliver aid to survivors as quickly as possible, virtually reaching all survivors of a natural disaster in that 48-hour window, all the while for a cost that has multiple orders of magnitude lower than that of the conventional disaster response system. The fifth prototype of our Humanity One drone is nearing its completion and will be, to our knowledge, the world's first AI-driven drone logistics system. Our system employs machine vision technologies to autonomously detect survivors and deliver aid with little to no human intervention. Our multifaceted and patent pending technology has attracted the attention of the Indonesian Disaster Management Authority, who was invited for our first pilot test in Indonesia this coming summer. We are faced with a $3.5 billion humanitarian logistics market in Indonesia alone. And once we saturate this beachhead market with our cutting-edge technology, we hope to expand to other countries in the next five to seven years. My name is Mohamed Nasser, and we are Drones for Humanity. Thank you.