 Thank you so much for the introduction. Yeah, it's exactly what Susan said. We are coming out of 20 years of Facebook, Google, dominating communication channels and content, and there's a lack of oversight and making sure that can be trust, these kind of sources of information. And I want to walk you through something. It sounds a little bit technical, I would say, but I want to use some animation to walk you through something that I believe is the next wave of internet that we've been through 20 years ago. And it's called blockchain. And I would say it's the new technology of trust because it will change how we interact between each other, how we transact because it's leveraging the open internet, it's leveraging cryptographic functionality. And we will see a lot of things will get faster, more secure, especially it comes to key information and also to establish a new way of trust. So something that for 20 years ago, we swing more to a central model. We will see we'll swing to a totally different model. And let me explain that in a small animation that I think we are at the beginning of a major change. If you look at today how we interact, is we transfer over the internet information by duplication. We always copy music, PDFs, PowerPoint, whatever, if you want to exchange this between two parties. So there's a lot of duplication. And in most of the cases, somebody that verifies that this is being processed in the right way. And that generates a lot of complexity. That all the parties have to reconcile their positions. They have to maintain their own books, I would say. And they have to be always in sync. And there's something, especially in the financial service industry, if you buy and sell stocks, it takes a few days. There are a lot of parties involved. And it takes time. And it's intransparent. And then now with the blockchain, what's the desire is that we are moving now in a world that physical assets can be transferred. That means we don't want to have a duplication of assets, whatever is out there. We don't want to use a third party. It's almost like a self-regulated bay to exchange doing a deal, doing a transaction, exchanging information. And so the blockchain technology at the end is it's something between two parties now. It's very direct peer-to-peer. The information that you store on the open internet cannot be changed. It's immutable. And it's happening without a third party. So it eliminates potentially maybe a Facebook, a Uber, playing houses, other third parties that usually between two parties are involved. Because the key point, if you look, what is a blockchain? I think you can discuss this in four topics. One is everything is digital. There's no paperwork anymore. Everything will be stored in a way. And the difference is that the network, that means you and I and other parties will verify in an automatic way those transactions by consensus. So it's a very decentralized way. And I will have an example in a minute about the media industry that the community at the end will make sure that those news are the right ones and also fast checks, et cetera. And it's secure. So you cannot add, move, change this information. If it's out there, it's verified. It's secured through cryptographic functionality. So it's a completely different way how we interact going forward. And it means what's the difference is at the end, the middleman, it can be a buyer and a seller. It can be an eBay that will disappear. There will be a direct relationship between an investor and a company somebody want to invest. And that's for me the real example right now in the industry because the venture capital industry is getting diminished by this because there's a new technology out there with the blockchain that companies can sell their virtual stocks through the blockchain technology and it's getting more funding right now than it called initial coin offerings than the venture capital industry. So venture capital is easy as a middle person is already under pressure. The same also between reader and producer, the middleman exchanging this information will disappear. And it's a serious business because it's very comparable with what happened 20 years ago. We're talking about 2,000 startups working in all industries, financial service industry, media, logistic health care, building up these new solutions. And if you look at how much money already is invested, very similar then to the internet startup companies 20 years ago, 500 million per year. But that number that was last year was 700 million invested in blockchain startup. This year will be over 3 billion because with the technology there is now access to capital that was not in place before. So we see a democratization of access to capital that usually we saw bottlenecks to private equity firms and venture capital firms will be free up. So there's something that I want to put you on here or put this on the radar skin of you because this has an impact on geography, on region, on business development. Let me walk you through one example. I'm not talking about financial service industry because the financial services banking is the fast mover. I would say very close to that is the media industry. And Susan mentioned that we run into an issue there's some content being produced out there and nobody can verify is it real, is it fake, et cetera. So there's a company out there and there are many other decentralized startups out there that are putting now news networks out there called decentralized news networks. That is a platform for producer, writers, reviewers, and readers. The producer provide content. There is a community of fast check reviewer and the community is then also they get paid for that, provide based on guidelines, is this information correct and provides this information to them to the community. And there's incentive for that because everybody gets through certain cryptocurrency gets paid for that. So there is a way also to increase the adoption for that. So there's collaboration that's decentralized and there's a factual way also to put information out there. So something that's really fascinating to watch I think the adoption of those kind of technology will be faster than I would say Facebook. It took them over three years to get to 50 million. I think this will be faster because there's a monetary effect that the user get instead of a company like Facebook for commercials. And this can be applied for all industry like financial services, logistics, health care, and other industry. At the end we're talking about significant benefits from perspective exactly. We're talking about simplification. We're talking about simple speed transparency from point of view. So the technology itself at the end it's a new technology of trust that the community built it able and there is a momentum across the region that I think is unstoppable. Thank you. Thank you very, very much. I must say I still feel it chill. I suspect the tax man also feels it chill because if there's no record then there is no tax. There is a record because everything will be a record on the internet. So the traceability of those transactions is even higher from the AML anti-money and ordinary perspective from that perspective. You see and it's a global theme. It's not limited to certain countries, et cetera. It will be cross-border accessible. That's great. Thank you. I mean what I'm hoping is when we get time to questions I mean people in the audience will have specific things to ask. The whole idea of decentralized media fascinates me partly because it seems to eliminate the whole idea of professionalism, professional editors, of training, of craft. If everything is a hobby then who do you trust? You could professionalists could get incentivized to be part of the radio because they get paid food there. So that's a different role that the editor could play in the future. Well, as a former editor I'd probably make more money with your blockchain than I do. Absolutely, I would say because I think you have much bigger access to information that can be verified. Anyway, thank you.