 Everyone, please welcome to the stage Maria Safedari, Wikimedia Foundation Board Chair. Good morning. Welcome to the 15th annual Wikimania. I should also say welcome to Sweden. This is the first time that Wikimania has been hosted in the Nordics. We have more than 800 Wikimediats in Stockholm from over 80 countries here to celebrate free knowledge and what we have achieved together. The theme of this year's conference is stronger together, Wikimedia, free knowledge, and the sustainable development goals. It's appropriate that we are in Sweden known for its focus on sustainability and gender equality. This weekend is an opportunity to talk about the UN SDGs and the role that we as Wikimediats can play in addressing some of these urgent issues. The SDGs are issues that are highly relevant to all of our lives, from education to gender diversity to environmental sustainability to name just but a few. This weekend is a chance to dive deeper into the SDGs and think about how they overlap with your work and free knowledge. This is a critical time to be thinking about the broader impact of our work. This event marks the next stage in our movement strategy process, an incredibly diverse collaborative process that we have undertaken over the past two years to figure out the future of our movement. Wikimediats, new and old, across borders and hundreds of languages have participated in this unprecedented process to think about where we want to be in 2030. This weekend you'll hear more and be able to share your thoughts and ideas on the recommendations as we move forward to implementation and change. I want to take a moment to thank Wikimediats Sweden for all of their work, organizing the event, and this weekend for all of us. This year's agenda includes the most community-led programs of any Wikimedia we have ever held. This weekend includes sessions that you have told us you want to hear with spaces and topics created and led by community leaders. This is your conference. That means that whether this is your first Wikimedia or your 10th Wikimedia, there will be something for you in our three days of sessions. I also want to thank all of the partners and sponsors that have made this event possible. And to talk a little bit more about Wikimedia Sweden and of all the work behind these things, it is my pleasure to introduce John Anderson, the Executive Director of Wikimedia Sweden. Thank you very much. Hi everybody and welcome to Stockholm. 13 years ago I got involved in the Wikimedia movement as an editor on the Swedish language version of Wikipedia. At that time I was a student at Umeå University and I wanted to make a difference. I thought Wikimedia looked pretty cool and figured perhaps I could add parts of the university assignments that I was writing onto the articles on Wikipedia. So I started doing that. At that time I was studying peace and conflict studies and I quickly realized there was a lot of information missing about different cultures and different countries in the world. So I continued editing. After a while I became an administrator on Wikimedia and I spent countless hours on improving it. Trying to contribute in my little way. From this grew something that has become a meaningful and major part of my life. What I came to realize after writing on Wikipedia for a while was that Wikipedia was really just the top of the iceberg. Behind this online Wikipedia was an entire movement, a community of volunteers and staff that are extremely dedicated on bringing free knowledge to the world. What I came to learn about was the Wikimedia movement. This movement of free knowledge lovers, they work on of course writing Wikipedia articles, but they also take photos and videos of the world to illustrate it. Since 2012 they've been working on structuring data onto Wikidata as a way to make it machine accessible, something that is crucial for artificial intelligence. They digitized books, historical books, to preserve endangered languages. They organized trainings and events. They find partners and help them share their content. They are the ones that build the software that makes Wikipedia run for the 500 million people that come there to read and learn every month. There are thousands of people working on thousands of different projects, large and small. Yet this is one global movement. No one decides what volunteers should do. No one controls them. They do what they feel are interesting and what they care about. Yet this is still working. This is crowdsourcing and it's simply amazing that it works. So writing articles is what got me started all these years ago, but I did not expect that I would have ended up here. Because today I'm very, very happy and excited to welcome all of you to this year's Wikimedia conference here in Stockholm. For us at Wikimedia Sweden, we are more than thrilled to host this conference. Not just because standing on a stage in front of a thousand people is pretty cool, scary and humbling, but it also kind of makes you feel a little bit like a rock star. But hosting a conference such as this has allowed us to introduce our work to so many great new volunteers and partners. It has also allowed us to tell Sweden about all the great things that Wikimedia movement is doing. And we will continue to tell people in Sweden about what we're working on, utilizing material from this very conference. Here in Sweden we have a few initiatives that have a global focus that you will find here in the conference program. We are supporting organizations to share the content online, for example historical collections from museums. And to do this more efficiently, we are working now to develop a technical team here in Sweden that will help support and build tools for the global movement. We are developing a text-to-speech solution called Wikispeech, which is a way for people to listen to Wikimedia. So if you cannot read for any reason, you can still access all the great material we have. Thank you for that. We're working with the Ministry for Foreign Affairs to organize edit-a-thons at Swedish embassies across the world, together with local Wikimedia affiliates and volunteers and local partners. This is a campaign intended to reduce the gender gap, and we call it VIKIGAP. The Ministry is also the one that supplied us with all these great things here on the stage. We are working with UNESCO, with Wikimedia Foundation and Swedish Postcode Lottery, to collect information about all the world's galleries, museums, what is often referred to as GLAMS. To case studies, we're also identifying what technical solution we need to develop to be able to efficiently add their content onto our platforms, and this is a project we call Finding GLAMS. And of course, we hope to host a number of more conferences here in Sweden to bring together a great movement in the years to come and plan for future products initiatives. But today, I'm very happy to talk about the conference in Stockholm, this very conference Wikimedia 2019. As you've heard, it's been organized 15 times, but this is the first time in Northern Europe. And ever since we sent in our application to host Wikimedia, I've been worried about three different things. What the weather would be here in Sweden, what you would think about the Swedish food, and what you would think about all the major things we changed in the conference this year. As you might remember, I warned you about these things when I was on stage in Cape Town in South Africa last year, but I'm very happy to see that you were not scared of. In fact, we had a record number of 800 applicants for the scholarships, around 400 submissions for the program, and today we have around 900 people attending. It was also great that we had 150 people applying to become volunteers. And with so many great volunteer applicants, it was really tough to handpick the 50 volunteers that are now working with us to support all aspects of the conference. We also had a wonderful program committee led by Lee and Wyatt that did a fantastic job of organizing all the programs. We had a wonderful scholarship committee that had to go through all the 800 applicants, which is a very tough job. And we also have 50 people that has helped on the line to help translate the material we have and to help spread their communities. An extremely important job. So I would like to give another round of applause for all of these great people, so please join me in that one. Thank you so much for your work. It is truly amazing. And without you would not have been possible to organize this conference. This year, we have a theme for the conference. You see it here up on the screen. Stronger Together, Wikimedia, Free Knowledge and Sustainable Development Goals. We wanted a theme that was presenting our work in a new light, that was forward-looking and that was inclusive. The Sustainable Development Goals, they were, at least in my opinion, the perfect lens to look through to achieve this. And student Michael Peter Edson, from the UN Museum of Life, he will introduce you to these goals in depth. And our hope as organizers is that the theme will be a source of inspiration for you guys to think about all the great things you're already doing and see how this is actually helping to contribute to these sustainable goals. But before Michael enters the stage to talk about the goals, I would like to share how the theme has influenced all aspects of the conference planning. We worked very hard to ensure that this conference is environmentally friendly as we can. This entire event is carbon neutral, thanks to our work with our organization, TerraPass. And this includes all of your trips here. We have reduced paper and plastic waste, we have carefully chosen catering, and we have tried to inform all of you how you can travel here with the least environmental impact. Ensuring that this conference represented diverse and beautiful community has been another central piece. This is reflected in a diverse program with speaker from across the world of different backgrounds, genders and more. It is also shown through the work done to capture and livestream as much as possible to allow for people to take part across the world even if they could not travel here. Partners are, of course, crucial for a successful conference such as this and are great partners made as possible. I would like to thank all of the Wikimedia organization across the world that has helped us and supported these efforts. And I would especially like to thank the Wikimedia Foundation, Wikimedia Deutschland, Wikimedia Norway and Wikimedia Finland. Without you guys, this would not have been the same. The conference team at Wikimedia Foundation has worked long days to make this all happen and I would like to thank UL, Isabel, Luis, Aaron, Blank and Sam, and all of that for their great efforts. I would also like to thank all of our sponsors, our partners and our supporters. You're all great and I very much look forward to working even closer with you in the future. And I would especially like to mention the support from the Swedish Post Gallery whose support has been crucial to get this conference where we wanted it. On this slide, you see our great sponsors at the Wikimedia Foundation of this conference and I would especially like to draw your attention to draw it big that's here on stage with me, Frida and Osa, who's helping to record this whole conference. It is really wonderful to have been able to work with all these great partners in this work. There's been a lot of interest for this conference, not the least because Wikimedia is so extremely used here in Sweden. 86% of all the people that are online in Sweden, they use Wikimedia regularly. For people... Oh, it gets better. For people under 40, 80% use Wikimedia regularly. Just think about that for a second. What other source of information has ever been able to reach so many people? Now, please look around you. A large part of the people that help make this Wikimedia work and create this great resource that are in this room. Well, in reality, it's around 0.4% of all the 250,000 volunteers we have, but they are some of the key players. And you all can and hopefully will help make Wikimedia even better and worthy of the trust that people put on it. But, of course, we're not doing this ourselves. And to bring other organizations that are working with free knowledge to this conference has been something I'm very excited about. This afternoon, we will have Creative Commons, we will have the Humanitarian OpenStreetMap team, Internet Archive, and many more tell how they are contributing to free knowledge and how it helps sustain the sustainable development goals. And I hope you will take this opportunity to network with them and learn from your peers during this entire conference. Together, and only together, we can truly change the world. And with that, I would like to hand over to Eric Lute, our conference manager and one of the people that made this whole event possible. Thank you, Eric, and thank you to you all. Thank you. Wow, that's a big crowd. I'm very excited to be able to be here today because we have voted very hard from the Wikimedia as very a chapter for the last almost a year to make this possible. My speech today is going to be one of the most exciting ones for this year's Wikimanias, the ones that are going to cover housekeeping and logistics. And I hope this is going to get very good grades from you in the evaluation afterwards. If something happens, if there is an emergency, and we all have to leave this room as quickly as possible, look for this sign. That's the sign for the emergency exits. You find emergency exits all across this lecture hall. And the good thing to think about is to try to get out as quickly as possible and gather at the lawn outside of Aula Magna. Grab only what you have in your hands and try to get out of here as quickly as possible. Hopefully nothing will happen, but it's very important to know if there should be something. There is a trust and safety team present here at Wikimania 2019. We're very excited to be able to present a safe environment for all of you who are here. You can recognize the people in the trust and safety team by the red bandanas they are wearing when they are on duty. On this picture, you'll find Crystal, Joe, who are among the trust and safety team. They will also be sitting in the community village and the interactive tables in Södra Huset, which is one of the parts of this year's venue. If you need someone in the trust team, and if you need to talk to any one of them, look for the red bandana, go to their table in the community village, or you can also ask the help desk to get in contact with them. This year we have provided CPR training to almost all of the volunteers that are here today. This is a way for us to make sure that if there is something that happens, you'll all be safe. But remember, however, if anything happens, call 112. 112 is the number to the Swedish emergency services. I know that we have different numbers across the world. The one to remember for this year's Wikimania is 112. Hopefully, no one will have to use it. But if you have to get in contact with the emergency services, this is the number that you're supposed to call. And call them before you do anything else. Call them, notify any of the managers here on site if you need any kind of help. There's also on the backside of your badge a number to the campus security. They are happy to help if you have any kinds of needs that relates to security. You will also notice when you go across the Aula Magna building, that there are security guards inside here. They're also happy to help if you should have any need. One of the things that makes me very excited about the Wikimedia movement is the extreme diversity. We can see this diversity here in this room today. We come from different cultures, different countries, different backgrounds, from different religions. We are very diverse. That's a very fantastic thing. But that also means that we sometimes have to think about how we treat each other and how we talk with each other in order to be able to ensure that we have a friendly space policy. And everyone who is registered for this event has signed an agreement to this year's friendly space policy. You can read the entire policy on the Wikimania Wiki and it's also printed at several places across the venue. The important thing when we deal with each other is the common belief. Anyone who is in this room believes dearly in free knowledge and that free knowledge can liberate people. If we remember that and try to treat everyone of us with respect, I think this conference is going to go very, very well. If there is an incident, if someone treats you badly, harasses you, or if there is any kind of incident, feel free again to reach out to the trust and safety team. You may also have noticed that there is a new photo policy for Wikimania 2019. You can read that online. You can also read it on the text here, on the back of the screen. I will read it just to make sure that everyone understands it. It says, I understand that I am not allowed to take or publish photographs or videos of people at this conference without getting consent of everyone depicted. Standing up for a group photo is considered consent as is publicly presenting on stage. If I do not want my image captured on photo or video at all, I can ask for a special land yard at registration. That means that people are wearing a red land yard, they don't want to be photographed at all. Please respect that when you are documenting. We are a crowd that loves documentation. I love that too, myself. But it is very important that we also respect that everyone does not want to be on a photo. I think it is very common sense, really. Make sure that people want to be on the photo that you take of them, and make sure that they agree to you uploading it and do it. One of the other things that makes me very excited about this year's conference is that we have been working hard together with Utbilings Radion, which is one of the Swedish public broadcasters to document this entire session in Aula Magna today. I think that is very fantastic that the public broadcasters are willing to do this, and I am very excited to see the result which will eventually be aired at Swedish television later on during the fall. That means that Summary is what is happening inside here to be aired on Swedish television. If you don't want to be aired on Swedish television, make sure to go or retreat towards the back of this lecture hall. If you want to be very, very sure that you are not on any kind of documented places at all, you can use any of the balconies which will be totally safe. It is also very exciting that we will be able to receive a CC biocopy of the documentation from Utbilings Radion. That means that we will in the end be able to also spread everything that is happening inside here today on Wikimedia Commons. I really think that is worth the applause. Our goal from Wikimedia's Winner side is to document every session at this conference that does not explicitly require otherwise. We have a team of volunteers and we also have a team from the Wikimedia Foundation's team that will help out with trying to make sure that everything is documented. You can see in the program that they explicitly said that they don't want to be documented. But speaking loudly in an event which is documented, is seen as consent to document your voice. All in all, if we manage to document everything that is happening that means that we will end up with between 200 and 300 hours of documentation from this year's Wikimedia. I think that is going to be pretty amazing to be able to use that afterwards. A few words about the program and maybe especially what is happening in this room today. After lunch, as you may know, we are going to have something that we have called the Free Knowledge and the Global Goals Spotlight Session. We have invited a couple of really good speakers and partners and friends to the movement who will give their views on how free knowledge can contribute to the Global Goals. On the screen you see only a few of them. But there is going to be, I think there are eight or nine different speakers who will give their views on how free knowledge can contribute to the Global Goals. When it comes to the program in itself, it ended up with more than 250 items across 19 different spaces. And as far as I understand, that is the largest program that has ever been held at the Wikimedia. It includes workshops, lectures, roundtables, seminars, and it is very diverse in its setup. We are going to talk about the sessions that will be inside here except for the one today. It will be documented by the Wikimedia Foundation. And most rooms will, again, be documented or recorded by volunteers from Wikimedia Sweden. If this is your first ever Wikimedia, we have tried to make it clear in the program which sessions are especially suited if it is a first time Wikimedia attendee. Look for Ideal for Newbies icons and you can go to sessions that will be very easy to understand for anyone. It may be a bit tricky this first day to find your way across the venue. We have plenty of volunteers that will try to help you. We have maps across the venue, but it is a bit, I think, is very beautiful. It's a wonderful place to be on, but it's a bit quirky and sometimes there are a lot of corridors and everything goes in different directions. We will do our best to make sure that everyone can find their way, if not to this presentation. This is the general layout of how Wikimedia 2019's venue will look like. We are at this point in Aula Magna, which is maybe you can read that on the screen. If not, it's not the largest one. The largest one to the top left, that's Söderhuset, which will include a lot of the breakout sessions. To the right of the Söderhuset, there is the Alhuset in Aula Magna and those two buildings are connected. We will come here to Alhuset without leaving this building. Aula Magna will be used for a lot of sessions as well, as will also Juristinashus, which is in that direction. Juristinashus has proven to be very hard to pronounce for a lot of people inside here. You can always go to a suite if you need help with pronunciation. Hopefully everyone, by the end of this weekend at least, will be able to say Juristinashus without any flu. We are also very excited to talk about the events. Those social events are possible due to our close work with several of our partners. One event will take place in the Stockholm city hall. You are all invited to attend the welcome reception, which is hosted in the city hall by the Stockholm city council. The city hall was built in the early 20th century and I think it's one of the landmarks of Stockholm. The other social event will be hosted at the Nordic museum in the large hall. Some of you who have been here for a while may have already been to the Nordic museum, but it's a beautiful building that is located in Stockholm as well. With those two social events, I hope that we will have, except for the program and everything that's taking place here, a large amount of time to also be able to socialize and have a really good time together. Some fun and information about how to get to the opening reception today. This is kind of the one really, really important time of this year's Wikimania. In order to ensure that everyone will be at time at the city hall, we have buses going from here to the city hall after the sessions end here today. The buses will leave between 530 and 6. We will have volunteers who will guide you in the right directions to be able to find the places where the buses will pick up locations for the buses. One will be just outside Aula Magna and one will be just outside Södrahuset and Alhuset. In order to get to the buses outside Aula Magna, just go out from here and to the farthest left or to your right in that direction. Go down the stairs and exit in that direction, then you will be able to find one of the bus picking up areas. The other one will be between Södrahuset and Alhuset. In Södrahuset you remember was the the large building at the top left. So if you go between Alhuset and Södrahuset, you will be able to get to the other bus location. But don't worry again, there will be several volunteers. They have white t-shirts and they are very happy to help you find the way to the buses. And that's a photo of one of the locations. Out of respect for the Stockholm city hall please arrive at city hall before the doors open at 6.25. If you go by the buses there is no way that you won't be able to do this. If you are going there by yourself it's really important that you respect this time. Those of you taking the buses you will be getting an entrance ticket when you go up on the bus. This must be presented when you enter the city hall. If you want to go to the city hall by yourself, volunteers will stand outside of the city hall and give you those tickets. But they have to be presented in order to be able to get into the city hall. You must also wear a wikimania badge in order to enter the reception. And unfortunately guests are not permitted. For the Nordic Museum closing reception that party on Sunday will start at 8. When you registered you got an entrance ticket. This one must be presented in order to enter the Nordic Museum. In your badge as well you will hopefully have two drink tickets. Those can be exchanged when you get into the Nordic Museum to get drinks at the Museum. At the Museum we are also very excited to be able to host the Museum Scavenger Hunt. You can see the sign at the entrance for more details about this exciting thing. Again, when you enter the Nordic Museum you must also wear a wikimania badge and guests are unfortunately not permitted. And finally we have a third, a bit smaller but still very important social event. Everyone who went to the wikimania conference in Berlin earlier this year will already know about it. But this weekend except for being wikimania 2019 also starts the Sue Strömming time of Sweden each year. If you don't know what Sue Strömming is it's a beautiful fermented herring. The university says it's okay for us to get you to taste it as long as we're outside. Make sure to collect all the trash and throw it away far away from here in order to make sure that there's nothing stinking here afterwards. The Sue Strömming tasting it will take place tomorrow at five. It's going to be just outside Aula Magna in that direction. And we are very happy to see all the funny faces that attendees will do to taste the fermented herring. With those words I think that I have said all the very funny, exciting and logistical things of this year's wikimania. If you have any questions there are always people in the help desk that can answer your questions and we will together from the conference team try to make sure that you have everything that you need in order to have a really good conference. And with those words I'd really like to invite our keynote speaker of this year's wikimania Longtime wikipedia fan and devotee of open content and also co-founder of the Museum of the United Nations to UNLIVE. A warm round of applause for Michael Peter Edson. Thank you. That was awesome. I love that. Good morning everybody. I think we're good. Hi. This is my spirit animal this moose. This a la harse moose. I appreciate that. Whoever designed that made me feel very much at home and put me in the right mood to come and speak with you this morning. How do we get difficult work done in society? And by we, I mean you as a community, I mean you as individuals, I mean you as citizens of your countries, as human beings as life forms and I mean us, we in this room because there's a lot to do. And related to that question really is another question. How do we get millions or realistically billions of people working together on global goals? And I put global goals as broadly and openly as possible. Things that need to get done. I'm Michael Edson. I'm co-founder and associate director of this thing called the Museum for the United Nations, UNLive. And before I left my secure happy wonderful job at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington to start this job, I was a digital strategist, a web maker and doer, a huge believer in the vision of the web of the internet as a place where we could do important work together as society and have a lot of fun. I've been working in museums for 25 years, but I don't think of myself as a museum person. I'm a painter and a print maker by training like many people my age, we were doing other things when the internet got interesting. I think the first web page I saw was for the Museum of Scientology at Stanford University on Mosaic XXX version XXX. My first job at the Smithsonian was cleaning Plexiglas. Wax on, wax off, $10 a case and it was in a lot of ways the best job I ever had. I'm going to start today. We're going to talk, talk, talk. We're going to play, play, play. We're going to work together a little bit. We're going to talk a little more and then I'm going to leave you with a big open-ended question which is how can this community which has accomplished so much together, stretch a little bit to accomplish something more. So a few stories, a few thought starters here. Doink! This is a pottery studio and I'm thinking of an anecdote from the book Art and Fear. I'm going to talk about the observations on the perils and rewards of art making. And in this story, can I break the plane here? Yes, I can. Stay in the light. So in this pottery class, as the stories told the first day of class in a college pottery class and the professor says, okay, everyone, I'm going to divide this class in half. Everyone on this side of the room is going to take a class depending on the weight of the pots that you make during the semester. I'm going to bring in my bathroom scale and we're going to put your pots on it and if you make a hundred pounds of pots you get an A, if you make 80 pounds of pots you get a B, and so on and so on. You over here bring me one pot on the last day of class and I will grade you on that pot. Now go learn and make. It was apparent from the very first days of class that by far the best work was happening not from the group assigned to quality, but the group assigned to quantity. It seemed that when students were trying to do work that mattered those assigned to think about quality were standing around contemplating perfection while those assigned to quantity were just trying things out and learning. It was clear to everyone in the class. So that's story number one. Story number two is a kind of intro is I was privileged to be a juror for the MacArthur Foundation's hundred and change initiative. The MacArthur Foundation had a change in strategy where they thought instead of spreading around a lot of money to a lot of worthy projects we're going to fund one major project to solve a major problem and put a hundred million dollars on the table for that over three years. And I read a lot of these proposals and they were all breathtaking. Not only new kinds of problems that I had imagined but ways of working on problems that I had not imagined before. But what was very apparent as a juror is that a hundred million dollars doesn't buy you much. I'm sorry to say. In one project as I recall it was proposing to reform the child welfare system in the United States. The child welfare system in the United States spends twenty three billion dollars a year. So over three years the MacArthur Foundation's hundred million dollars could accomplish one sixtieth one six hundredth of that scale. A hundred million dollars didn't do that much when you start looking at big work that needs to happen. So there must be another way. Three out of four intro stories. In the nineteen nineties the Urban Institute went to Oakland, California to study cultural participation among under privileged communities. So they sent field workers out to the streets and they said so where do you get your culture? And they were met with blank stares. People said we don't have that stuff around here. Sorry. But to their credit the researchers went back to the lab and they asked the question a different way when they came back a few months later they said who are the creative people in your community. And when they asked the question that way they received an outpouring of ideas and thoughts and excitement about the poets, the rappers, the artists, the musicians, the singers, the writers, the doers in their neighborhoods. The problem wasn't that there weren't creative people in the community. The problem was that people hadn't learned to associate their creative, cultural daily lives, the grammar of their daily lives with the institutions that were founded and funded over many years to serve them. Last intro story getting warmed up the snowpocalypse in Washington DC in 2010, February 2010, I forget it was three feet of snow, it's not much for Stockholm, Sweden but it was a lot for us and it came on very quickly and some friends of mine were organizing a big technology conference for that weekend and many people had already arrived and I mean a big conference 2010, this is a little bit after the dot-com bubble burst but still a lot of money coming to Washington DC to meet and sell. So people were stuck in hotel rooms, the conference organizers cancelled the conference I was drawn to you John and everyone, God forbid something like that happens here but they cancelled the conference insurance policy for the conference kicked in said all of you organizers you have to put down your laptops and pens you can't do anything, it's over but the attendees didn't get that memo so sitting around in their hotel rooms they created their own conference they created the un-tech 10 conference on the fly using free tools, wikis, YouTube, Facebook, they somehow managed, I forget what the live streaming app was at the time, maybe not even an app but they made their own conference and most participants said it was better than the official one house party beats a formal dinner any day of the week and the organizers were both enthralled because this was their community that was rising up and showing what they were made of and also terrified because the conference group spent a year and hundreds of thousands of dollars in a big team organizing this thing that the people did on their own, better, faster and cheaper does this sound familiar? so what do we take away from this? there are many alternatives to top down problem solving, closer to the ground bottom up, distributed networked and local these are words that I've heard over the years as I've talked to people about what they do and how they work that I respond to a lot networked, close to the ground bottom up, distributed two, money's great I've seen a lot of projects fail for want of money but even large amounts of money under central control are not enough to solve certain kinds of problems and I am aware that I'm standing on a stage with an articulation of some of the greatest challenges we have as human beings now there's a tremendous potential and vitality in the know-how of communities and I'm using the word know-how very intentionally not expertise know-how with its connotation of doing relating so from this arises an obvious hypothesis it's probably one you came into this room today already thinking about and knowing huh, I wonder I wonder if we can weave these ideas together these ways of thinking and doing into a form that helps all of us accomplish not only difficult work we know about but maybe even accomplish work we can't even understand now that nonetheless needs to be done so with that being said as an intro boom let's play so this next moment is going to be busy and frenetic I hope if you prefer not to engage in that kind of activity please just stay calm and be tolerant of the rest of us if you have someone like that near you who does not wish to participate please respect their wishes absolutely I am by nature an incredibly shy introvert but I've learned to fake it because I believe that this stuff needs to happen so here's what we're going to do my spirit animal says only if you enjoy this kind of activity rock paper scissors the rules rock paper all of these images by the way are in the wikimedia commons they're all properly cited at the bottom thanks to yeah take a bow rock paper scissors rock beats paper paper beats scissors no no did I do that wrong I did that on purpose to see if you were paying attention what did I say there that's awesome yeah yeah yeah okay so ignore the man on the stage you know how the game goes that's so funny that's what doing slides at 2am gets you okay so here are the rules here's what we're going to do don't stand up yet everyone's going to stand up you're going to face your neighbor look them in the eye say hello we go one two three shoot where I come from if you tie do it again if you lose sit down and then find someone else to compete with okay we're going to have a wikimania 2019 Stockholm rock paper scissors champion I love the sound that's happening do you need someone alright it's a pitched battle in the upper deck it looks it looks kind of like you're casting spells at each other too it's like a patronum oh boy I really like the long distance spells do we have a section one winner oh brilliant alright are you still up oh look at this please fight it out do it long distance do we have an upper tier winner is the upper tier washed out are you still duking it out up there I think the upper tier is done how are you guys up there do you have an upper deck winner in the cheap seats you all are looking great up there winner over here do we have here we go wait green shirt white shirt yeah should I call it out oh three of you do you two go first rock wins rock wraps around paper wraps around rock it's jet lag right okay so here we go and the wick of media community is pointing to a big winner okay up there standing yes here okay this is it I'm going to call oh no down here you two ready one two three shoot oh go ahead scissors scissors scissors rock rock one more okay this is it last one section one cheap seats you still going oh you're the best you too quickly go paper wins and then up there last go ready can you see each other you need binoculars in this place okay yeah let's move through call it out scream it that looks like scissors and scissors again this is brutal paper paper ah the Swedes the Swedes are all about no you first please rock scissors rock rock hey that was fantastic thank you for indulging me and enjoying that in the spirit of it so this rock paper scissors is played in many many places or this is another commons photograph this is from Myanmar some really cute little dudes playing away it's also an ancient game this is a print from 1820 village head fox and hunter I think it had roughly the same rules you can play in fortnite battle royale these two dudes this video these two dudes are their arm to the teeth and ones wearing a pink bunny outfit is that a fortnite thing um and they show up in a clearing together to fight each other and they sort of they stash their gear and then they do rock paper scissors and one of them loses and is vanquished from the game of course you can play in minecraft paper bedrock and shears there's a game show in the Philippines jackpot and poi that is super hardcore they really amp it up with music and there's a big prize I think the winner wins $10,000 in each episode um hey and wikimedians this is from akara ganna the wiki in daba 2017 anyone here from that gang is there a winner do we have a ringer from this competition um and here adrian and leon two of your own I was working on slides in the in the lobby the other night and they were um solving uh turn taking or card drawing in the game they were playing with rock paper scissors and I asked if I could hang out with them and film I think that came out really well I like the blur that's just very fast um this is a good one too uh this is jimmy falon an American television host kind of a a goof goofy guy has they bring on stage sofia who is a robot dressed up a physically human like robot who uses um algorithmic intelligence in her front end and they have this encounter together on stage and you can see jimmy falon is he's very unnerved by this person this entity in front of him this this robot and they play rock paper scissors and he's he looks like he's about to scream and run out of the room at any second there's something about play that's that's leveling a way of interacting even between two a species and a artificial entity um and then there's this the robot says I got you all day hahaha bring it on human so this is thank you yeah I think they deserve a hand this video is was specially um we have special permission to us at this conference in the rebroadcast um from the Ishikawa Senu Laboratory at the University of Tokyo what's happening is there's a high speed camera that senses what you're going to do processes it throws the robot fingers in a millisecond that's the loop which is hundreds of times faster than our kind of slow homo sapien sapien brains are doing that gummy thing that we do in space um and so there's there's a there's a point to this um this exercise this laughter this playing I don't know about you but I feel very different now having laughed and walked around and seen some of you face to face and met some of you face to face than I did 15 minutes ago 10 minutes ago um the neuro psychology of laughter tells us that laughter stimulates both sides of the brain um activates the limbic system connects the right and left hemispheres humor releases tension which can and this is a nice uh phrase it can lead to perceptual flexibility huh flexibility um many of the games used in improvisational comedy training this article notes can be used in product design or problem solving processes to promote associative thinking teams that do this kind of play before working on difficult challenges dramatically outperform those that do not in study after study atul gawande the surgeon and writer in his book uh cognitive I'm sorry not cognitive surplus the checklist manifesto tells of an experiment done in surgical operating rooms around the world his challenge was how do we solve the difficult problem of how to dramatically decrease complications arising from surgery the thing they found that worked the best the most reliably was to have each member of a surgical team introduce themselves say their name and what they were doing in today's operation that's all they did they went around in a circle and faced each other as colleagues and introduced themselves gawande says that there's an activation phenomenon among groups that open themselves up into their small public sphere together um after three months of doing these introductions surgical teams reported they functioned as a well coordinated team uh prior to the study 68% of the time after the study 92% of the time and it doesn't cost a thing so the infrastructure of play of dialogue of conviviality that supports solving difficult problems can be designed for I've become a student of the body language of participation to look for ways in which teams working on difficult problems laugh and play together these effects can be designed for they can also be die on the vine if they are neglected I read recently that when one shops at a farmer's market one has 10 times more personal interactions with one's neighbors than if you shop at a chain store that's a simple kind of civic design with a dramatic impact on some of the sustainable development goals that involve loneliness the development of cities neighborhoods longevity and health yes spirit animal patronis says this can be designed for um but only if design is allowed to happen early and often throughout the life of a project and I use that word very intentionally allowed allowed to happen it's not a commandment it's an openness and a welcoming to participate to co-create early often and playfully when solving difficult problems like these guys yeah these are the 2030 goals the sustainable development goals and they are the underlying theme of wikimania much to the credit of your community and your local organizers um these goals were designed with a lot of input from around the world but they're hard to play with their infrastructure and position is about governance and messaging they're hard to play with though I know many of you in this room have worked on ways to open them up to play so we have now that we're warmed up whoops there we go you know that guy now that we're warmed up we've faced each other a little bit I'm going to have an assignment to request an openness for you you have these little printouts in your seats near your seats of the sustainable development goals these were made with a template of a hand stamp sort of some of you may have seen me in the hotel lobby yesterday stamping these out by the way I'm exhausted it's like I feel like I did a thousand pushups what I would like you to do is we're going to take a few minutes look at these goals front and back if you can't read one of them they're not perfect ask a neighbor compare most of them are different I think they're 60 or 70 different prints that are circulating and I want you to think about these not don't analyze them don't think about which is the the best think about one that means something to you and your personal life your lived experience that you have a story about I'm going to pause for a minute and see where that leads think of a story one of these that you relate to as a human being now if you and only if you enjoy this kind of interaction I want you to face your former adversaries from a rock paper scissors tournament just two or three of you at a time and just tell each other say hi if you don't know each other's names and just tell each other that share that story say it out loud what is the story what goal does it relate to go ahead I'll give you a couple minutes to do that I'll say that conversation is like music it sounds so good I keep listening for that moment when you're done and I don't think it's going to happen okay we found I would like to hear some of the stories and I would like to hear all of the stories actually and actually there is a way Liam created I asked Liam what is what would be a wiki media community way of sharing these stories on a wiki so Liam if you go to today's program page and you search for my name in this session and there's a link share your story that goes to this page but I would also be happy to hear your story in person you can also write it to the platform of your choice and tag it wiki mania we'll find it you can email me I'm easy to find but we found with Eric and Liam's help we have a couple of microphones and I'd really like to hear one or two or three of the stories just really quickly and I think I'm going to let you guys sort it out and I'm sure to see up here Liam do you want to and if you yeah please all right should I speak now yes please all right hello I'm Lucas I'm a wikipedia from Germany and not at this conference but four years ago at wiki mania 2015 I asked myself what we as wiki media movement are doing to reduce our negative impact on the environment and the answer was nothing and that we turned home from that conference four years ago a wikipedia friend and I we started what is called the wiki media sustainability initiative and this initiative it calls to reduce the amount of carbon emissions that we create by running the service by hosting events like this and we are calling for sustainable investment of moving resources and in that way I think this initiative focuses on a lot of the sustainable development goals so from hunger to clean water clean energy to climate action of course life below water on land and of course partnership because we need to do that together and now today the wiki media sustainability initiative is supported by over 500 wiki media volunteers and staff members over the world and I'm very happy that in 2017 the wiki media foundation said yes this is important we need to do something about this and on Sunday in the environment conference track the wiki media foundation will present its first ever sustainability report and I'm very happy and very excited to see what then leads from it and what we're going to do about this thank you but if we had time I'd ask you what it was that caused you to have that question you asked yourself so hello hello my name is Anna and I have in my hand the SDG2 zero hunger which relates to the eradication of all forms of malnutrition but also to ensure food security to all this SDG is for me one of the SDG so well not just for me it's one of the SDG's that is very transversal to all SDG's and it's somehow the story of my life and my work so far that relates to nutrition these SDG stocks very strong to my mind to my heart and to my belly and the belly of the many million people I have seen around in the world working as humanitarian nutritionist for the last 15 years there and also back home in Guatemala where I come from and where the vast majority of people has experienced one of the different grades of malnutrition there is where I have evidence how aberrant malnutrition is and jeopardize the fulfillment of any of the other SDG's there I observe women who are normally those who are mostly affected by malnutrition when they have, they raise children these children are very likely to be undernourished children that are undernourished are going to experience a lot of difficulty to learn in the school if they are lucky to go to the school otherwise they will have a lot of challenges to use cognitively with labor, with their force so they are going to be in this aberrant cycle of economic dependence also on top of this these undernourished children where adults they are very likely to develop some of the diseases associated to malnutrition such as obesity overweight, cardiovascular diseases diabetes, militis and if we make a little bit of the logical cycle these adults are again very likely to raise children with similar conditions so as you see this SDG, malnutrition, hunger is so powerful and it touches everybody, every country everywhere in this planet so I really wish to have these scissors just to cut and eradicate SDG to well not the SDG, the hunger with a lot of very insesibly thank you Anna, yeah, thank you one more hello Florence you said a sentence that really ring the bell in my mind that was if design is allowed to happen early I was thinking one of the key feature key design feature of Wikipedia from the start was to allow anyone to participate that was the key design feature and I often said no one knows everything but everyone knows something but at the same time for me I joined, I'm French I joined Wikipedia 18 years ago and when I did for over one year I was the only woman in the French speaking space and no one really seemed to care and it was absolutely not discussed there was nothing being done about that and that changed and the first signal for change was actually during Wikimania that was Wikimania Taiwan which was in 2007 and at that time we had the first wiki woman lunch guess how many people were there at that lunch give me a figure no it was not so bad actually but it was still quite bad we were at 12 right so we were around the round table and the 12 of us together and I think there are three of us left probably should be in the room there's Phoebe maybe Phoebe is around and there's Delphine maybe Delphine is around yeah I see Delphine, is there Phoebe Phoebe had, yeah Phoebe so yeah we were, I think no one else am I forgetting someone we were 12 at that time and that was probably one of the first discussion we had where we tried to design a very strategy to get women in and think well 12 people, my friends that was really not a lot, look where we are now so I fear I might not be at the next wiki women lunch because they added a Wikimania comedy but nevertheless there is a wiki women lunch today so please get there and count yourself so that in a few years we can say what's the difference but in any cases after that lunch there were so many initiatives that erupted around the world so I might mention a few ones I started wiki loves women I joined Les Sampages in the French space there's often women of course women in red with Rosie probably in the room as well they are art and feminism there's wiki Doné yeah from Camélia is around as well so there are so many many different projects that arise and that really push things so that now can be super super proud of our work and we need to continue yeah thank you thanks so we've done these workshops these conversations all over the world it often we're not often asked to tell stories or relate to big ideas through stories this was a workshop we did in Rio de Janeiro among some people in very difficult circumstances in their lives we've done workshops with kids working through the big ideas of the sustainable development goals and their own life stories through Lego play I'll tell a little story about that later and if you think back on what we just did to transition into the next part of this talk this presentation the director of the Copenhagen Public Library said we can do programs all day long where we put someone on a stage and people come and relate to them like spokes in a hub now we're trying to do programs that help people face each other because these are the relationships and the citizens and the young people and old people who are the source of society of humanity and of solving these making communities better so we played we got our hearts going we faced each other we talked we thought about our own lives and we hopefully approached these or thought about these or you would have to look at these goals a little differently knowing that it was about you and not about the UN or the museum or the government so I got an email one day I was at the Smithsonian institution having a tough day and I got an email dear Mr. Edson would you please join us at the would you please I know it's an inconvenience join us at the United Nations in New York next week to help create the vision for a new museum for all of humanity the goal of which is to help people everywhere to solve the sustainable development goals to act on them we think of this as a museum on three platforms a physical building civic center lab hub in First and Copenhagen but then maybe in other places in the world if they need it a digital presence and of course a network of people spanning the whole world so if you're not too busy we know it's an inconvenience would you please come to New York to help us and I took a walk around the block to calm myself down and checked the email five times to make sure it was addressed to me and I typed back yes I think I can fit that into my schedule so I went to New York and then I went online to see what I could learn the UN was founded in 1945 to prevent another global war in the aftermath of World War II 51 nations signed the original treaty and at the time the population of Earth was 2 billion people State of the art IT was the telegraph and shortwave radio and delegates took steamships to attend the first meeting of the General Assembly in San Francisco today 193 member states represent the world's 7 billion people and the UN's portfolio includes peacekeeping, economic and social development the environment human rights and humanitarian work the sustainable development goals articulate 17 global challenges with 169 specific targets we need to reach by 2030 which is 10 years away there's not a second to waste zero poverty zero hunger gender equality climate action the list goes on and on and sometimes people see the list for the first time and they kind of they're amazed they laugh a little bit that's good I think that laughter is the sound of your brain waking up becoming alarmed by something that needs your full attention the UN belongs to all of us it needs all of us it is not perfect by any stretch of the imagination but it's hard to imagine a world without it and over the last 7 decades it has become I would say one of humankind's most important achievements the UN is dedicated from the first words of its charter to we the peoples but currently it's very difficult for we the people to act as stakeholders there is no public place online or anywhere in the world where you can touch the UN where you can learn about it with your mind and your senses where it welcomes you as a partner and where it can become part of you can become part of its work this maybe as I was listening to John's wonderful opening remarks this maybe is how people thought about an encyclopedia 30 years ago so again how do we get difficult work done in society how do we get millions and billions of people working together on global goals the UN was founded by necessity to be an organization of governments relating to governments nation to nation as you might say gov to gov but it's not news to you that we live increasingly in a person to person or peer to peer world a world in which many of the problems and many of the solutions lie outside the domain of governments and traditional institutions so a dramatic shift is needed in our thinking and our doing to reach these goals the museum for the united nations UN live is a startup NGO we're a very small team the idea was thought of in Copenhagen so that's where we're based but it could have been thought of where no one owns the idea we're close to but not part of the united nations we have a permit from the secretary general to use the UN's name and brand in association with our work we're one of only two organizations that I know of in the world who has that privilege early on in the work of this project people identified the need for a new kind of platform that could bring people from different sectors together to work on things that mattered and early on from people who were not museum people they thought that a museum could serve as that kind of convener that kind of platform we have a mission and I'm going to geek out on missions for a second we're starting something new and these words in a mission really matter so Clay Scherke describes institutions as frozen decisions you can't have a workforce showing up every morning or a movement showing up every morning trying to reinvent the organization from first principles you need to lock in some ideas if you're locking in ideas you better be darn sure those ideas are powerful so here's what we've done our mission is to to connect people everywhere to the work and values of the United Nations starts with a verb connect that's a very good action word who? people what kind of people? people everywhere it's the first project I've ever worked on that pretty much every not pretty much everyone on earth is entitled by right of being a human being to be a participant in and a beneficiary of what are we connecting to not the UN itself but to its work and values this is not a marketing arm of the UN this is about its work first and its values and big and the mission is not complete until the next part and catalyze global effort towards accomplishing its goals it must be about the effort and the action sustainability sustainable development goals staring down at us with climate change staring down at us this can't be just about appreciating the challenge it must accomplish something therefore effort catalyzing effort towards accomplishing its goals achieving its goals we often now say we have a dream to dramatically increase the number of people in the world to directly participate in solving global challenges from the bottom up in their own daily lives some of the when you put a mission like that out into the world and you begin listening to how people react to it you begin studying how people are doing difficult work that matters some ideas and themes occur over and over again one is this idea of bottom up bottom up if one were to step all of the projects designed to catalyze effort towards the global goals many of them fall in what I think of as a top left corner of a grid they're designed from the middle and participants are expected to follow the design of the designers it's very different than Wikipedia and that kind of effort is good and we need more of it and I think there is dramatically more potential in flipping the perspective around and beginning with people in their daily lives just hearing a few of the stories you've told about the sustainability sustainable development goals tells me that this is the right approach we wonder who is this institution for we say you and live the museum is for those who are open to seeing things in a bigger perspective belonging to a bigger community are open to using their ability to change something they care for and are open to making a tangible change happen we started out with a demographic we're for teenagers who watch this movie in this location it's much more constructive to talk about this psychographic this kind of mindset about how old they are we also see very much a relationship between the very global and the very local I think one of the big challenges for us in the next decade or so is how to wed local impact with global participation how those two things fit together this is also shamelessly an effort to get more people involved is the saying from software early programming with enough eyeballs all bugs are shallow with enough people on the case many problems that seem impossible are quite easily solvable I'm also thinking about Joy's law Bill Joy was the co-founder of Sun Microsystems and he famously said no matter what business you're in most of the smart people work for someone else and actually someone came up to me after a talk once and said I used to work for Bill Joy and that was really true at Sun Microsystems most of the smart people did work for someone else we talk about shining a light on people and communities our beginning assumption is that most of the behaviors the problem solving, the ideas that we want to see more of in the world are already happening in the texture of daily life in communities around the world we can't find that from the center but they can find us and each other if we begin to shine a light on these extraordinary people and of course a bridge to action I'll say more about that in a minute and through working with how do we create a museum that gets billions of people involved in accomplishing something I've seen this is, we call this one of our ninja moves oops, where am I back there we go we call this a ninja move this idea, many of the design patterns we think about and we see are things that people think about as being opposites on a spectrum we can solve these problems if people have more empathy no no no, we can solve them if people get busy and just start working there's no way to connect no no, it's intellect global, local, digital, physical top down, bottom up young, old we're trained to think of these things as opposite and that we have to make a choice what we're finding again and again is that these things want to be a circle they want to be a system top down and bottom up work together digital and physical work together young and old work together we have to be sensitive to the way that these things fit together in daily life we're very interested in speed speed speed speed and of course I'm referencing the wiki wiki bus at the Hawaii airport that was as a legend has it as Andrew Lee's wonderful book told me the inspiration for the name wikipedia wiki wiki means fast fast it isn't a lot of time we think, I think that humanity is facing a series of challenges that don't yield to our habitual understanding of how long things take and how much effort it takes to succeed Bill McKibbin is here in Rolling Stone quoting an environmental activist Stefan does anyone know what's happening out of my mind right now winning slowly is the same as losing writes Mr. McKibbin if we don't win very quickly on climate change then we will never win that's the core truth about global warming it's what makes it different from any other problem our political systems have faced the excruciating power lies in the pain of looking back and seeing that there was a small window in which it was possible to act and then discovering how suddenly and irrevocably that window can be slammed shut and this from a lawyer and organizing Agonoz or Aditi Junegia if you've wondered what you would have done during slavery the holocaust or the civil rights movement you're doing it now as I said we see ourselves as a system with three main parts online and network in the building I think in a hundred years if we succeed and I think my experience here with you these last few days bears this out if we succeed the thing that will have made the difference is the network it's the people everything else is a means to that end so why are we a museum why would you make a museum to do this museums are not universally loved I'm super aware of that and I have a love-hate relationship with them myself and frankly the UN is not universally loved either I was at a workshop in Addis Ababa we were running and someone raised their hand and said a museum and the United Nations those are like two of the worst things in the world and you're building them together like are you crazy but after talking with her this person she said and yet I came and yet I came because there's something within the vision of the United Nations and its values and of museums that seem to her to be worthy of protecting or exploring and also she said that this little word at the end of our name live was intriguing so she came and what we learned there are lots of reasons to be a museum trust, convening power the ability to mix and remix different kinds of experiences the commitment to last in a culture and a community over long periods of time to be accountable for our decisions but the real breakthrough for me was in this workshop we did with 10 to 14 year old kids in rural Denmark and what happened was we gave them a series of Lego bricks and I wanted to ask them here's our project, should it be a museum what should it look like but often you don't get a good answer when you ask people directly so we had them build little models and the first model they built was I said build a model of a good day you have with your family okay click click click click it was like music the little Lego bricks coming in and they showed their models of days to the park and going and getting ice cream and being at the beach with family or a vacation and it was okay build another model, change this one a little bit but this model is a place you go to learn about the future it's part of your day with your family and they go click click click click click click click they looked a little puzzled but they included a building a place with activities a place that was sort of like a school but they were kind of confused I didn't want to use the word museum I didn't want to use the word library I just wanted them to sort of move into these ideas but they were lost so finally I said okay it's a museum for the future and they just looked so sad when I said museum they just they just died a little bit inside like okay the game is up we're imagining the future but this is about somebody a museum so I'm out of here and they just checked out and we tried running this workshop a lot of different ways if we didn't say what it was they looked baffled if we said it was a museum they kind of died a little bit inside and after one of these workshops I was very frustrated I started asking them what kind of places do you go in your community where do you go to have fun what places do you love and they said oh there's this place we all go to in the city center what do you do there we go there every day after school we do homework we play games we listen to music we hang out what's it called they had no idea what it was called it's just that place their teacher told me afterward it's a library they go to their public library every day after school they had no idea it was a library like couldn't care less that it was a library they went there every day it taught me it taught us that people don't think about museums and libraries in the abstract very few people do they think about places that they go and love places where they have good experiences but these ideas of a museum or a library or a school or a conference are required as a little bit of a framing device to signal to people what kinds of experiences they have and what they might be asked to do but from then on out it's all about what the action is alright head, hands and heart so what we've learned is if we approach these challenges through only the intellect if we use the information deficit of action and change if you know more things you will take action and solve these goals we've learned that that doesn't work a social scientist will tell you that that kind of behavior change has almost never happened on earth it's very discouraging and sometimes the opposite happens sometimes the more you know about a subject the less likely you are to take action on the other side of the frame is emotion if people could feel a connection a lived and emotional connection to the sustainable development goals they would be more likely to act to own these goals as their own and continue through to change and solve the goals but we have very little evidence that that happens either and on the third side of this we have the knowledge of the hands the habit of people doing and making in their daily lives they seldom considered as part of the tool set for solving big goals it's the kind of work I saw happening in the hotel lobby and in the hackathons and in your conference sessions the last few days the habit of doing of making, completing, doing is something that needs to be in the mix so we say we're designing for head hands and heart together as one unit we imagine festivals local gatherings, intimacy physical presence is very important but grown up from the local community level this is a pop up festival that was done in Leiden the Netherlands about a month ago just neighbors gathering to talk about what they do what they think we think that video global connected video will be very important in connecting people to each other and the body language of participation and change and play you can tell how much we think play is important when I was flying over here I was thinking about Pippi Longstocking everybody knows Pippi I grew up here in Scandinavia in Sweden and I realized all of the great children's literature in the world happens when the grownups are out of the room right like where are Pippi's parents who knows where are the adults in the Harry Potter series they're terrible adults most of them are very problematic a lot of the great children's literature happens when the grownups are gone and young people have to figure things out when these very complex goals arrive when a museum arrives people it's like mom and dad are home people shut down and a lot of the creative process of opening up this museum to people everywhere is about getting the grownups out of the room so that you can think and play and work we have designed a global we're creating a global participatory role playing game to begin drawing people into climate issues climate change issues through participatory imaginative play alright wrapping up as you're in your sessions the next few days you're going to hear about the SDGs and this community knows a lot about how to work at a global scale quickly and reliably to achieve stunning results it's a skill set that the rest of the world that the UN that this museum that humanity needs but we don't know exactly how yet so my ask of you with what I've said and the waving of hands about emotion and intellect and participation my my ask of you is that you think of us as we as you move through the next few days and think about what you can add to this work on the global goals and I'll finish with a quote from Greta Thunbury she says adults keep saying we owe it to the young people to give them hope but I don't want your hope I don't want you to be hopeful I want you to feel the fear I fear every day and then I want you to act thank you so much Michael for inspiring presentation we would like to give you this little diploma we made a donation to UNDP in appreciation of this presentation thank you so much thank you so much so thank you now we have lunch so you can please exit up there and mingle around network and get new friends thank you so much