 Hello, I'm Natasha Roth, I come from Geneva but I'm half French and half British and I am a professional coach and also an engaged feminist. So I came to Wikipedia when I was pregnant and when my kids were born because I was getting bored at home and I discovered the encyclopedia online and then it was a way of discovering lots of different subjects and being free to explore and I really loved the participative side of it. I think it's important to have women participating more in Wikipedia because men are socialized a certain way so when you have a majority of men contributing on Wikipedia well you have more football articles and more articles on Pokémon but you don't have a lot about design and subject that would be the feminine and then you have nearly nothing concerning feminism. So I think if a community writes overwhelmingly on Wikipedia then we have biased content and that's not what we want on an encyclopedia we want it to be neutral and have everything represented. A renowned feminist foundation in Geneva in Switzerland had read about the New York Times article on the gender gap and they mandated the university to have a conference about it and so I was approached to make a conference on the Wikipedian gender gap and then I thought this is not good because we're going to have 200 people coming learning about the subject, clapping their hands and then off they go home and we haven't addressed the issue practically we have not advanced one year towards the solution so I said okay let's do workshops and have more women to contribute and that's how it all started. It's really nice to see women who are hesitating and the big smile on their face when they have published their first article because we took newbies, we took people and never contributed and when they published they are so overwhelmingly happy therefore it was a very positive side to my engaged feminism which involves sometimes a lot of adversity. We can address the gender gap and we can look at the way women and men react differently concerning the edit button and the fact that men are less afraid to make mistakes so I encourage women to write to make mistakes to not to be afraid of it and I always start a workshop saying that when I started teaching Wikipedia has only known how to contribute myself for something like three weeks to one month so you know everybody can really push the edit button.