 The Internet Monitor Report is a way for us to kind of get a big picture view on all the current issues that really matter to all the people involved in the Berkman Center, and that really covers a lot of different angles and different disciplinary approaches to studying the Internet. The section's called Public Discourse, and that was basically about how communities have conversations online, how those conversations play out, and how technology mediates those conversations. So this paper was co-written with Sounds Fish, and it was focusing on the narrative or discourse that happened surrounding the Gaza War of 2014. There was a lot of social media activity around it, and there was a need to unpack that social media activity and understand what the voices were and how they aligned with different media sources. So my pieces appear in the data and privacy section of the report. One of them is a piece about mapping the data ecosystem. My essay is about privacy in the context of human subjects research, and it asks the question in the age of the web, what does public mean? The other piece is a kind of experimental fiction piece about personal data and the Internet of Things, and in it I talk about how my fridge basically is predicting a pregnancy. I think it gives you a great snapshot of what's been going on in the last year, and also it gives you some insights into what are the interesting things that other people are studying. I think it's really important to take the step back and look at the reflections that have come, especially since this is a collection of essays from top researchers across the world. This report is important to read for people who aren't in the Internet society domain, because it gives them a very 30,000 foot view, look at what's going on in the Internet and how communities are forming and how conversations are playing out.