 In the line, number one is going to be on the left-hand side from my view, from the right-hand side of yours. Number second is going to be on your left-hand side. Number 71 is also going to be on your left-hand side. Number 140 is going to be on your right-hand side. Number five is going to be on your right-hand side. Number six is going to be on your left-hand side. Everyone is getting delayed because of the slowest person determines the speed of the key-siding party. We should figure out some sort of algorithm that determines the slowest person. Yeah, we have two rides, one with the paranoid people who side each other very carefully, and then we run with the people who will use the life to check it, and then I'm done with it. So why is this important to do? I think she asked you. Yeah, I know. It's like a kind of obligation to the software community to make sure that the trust network is very well connected. Especially when you're traveling far, you can sign people who you would normally not easily meet and so have a very good connection to the trust network. Alright, enough of the talking, move on, come on. Yeah, yeah, I did see the checkup on. What was that? Is your fingerprint okay? Yes, it says, as is mine. Thank you. So is this for a home video, or are you actually going to cut this together and like do some sort of... I would like to cut it together. There's no tape. It's just a show. Hello, I'm why is it important? Why do you like to sign keys? Why do I like to sign keys? Well, it makes me actually confirm that all these people that I've like shaken hands and drunk beer with actually are real legitimate people. And that, I mean like if any of them actually poison me, I'll be able to know that those are their legitimate names. And are you the last person? No, it's a rotating mind, that's why it works. So why is it important to sign keys? So that we know that the people that we're dealing with in the community really are who they say they are, and otherwise we really don't have many opportunities to know everybody in the community in real life. So it's an additional protection in Debian to make sure that it's basically a safety that the people that are working with us are some kind of cracker who's gotten into the key ring by lying about who they are and plans to discard the identity later after violating our system or something like that. Do you enjoy the key signing? Talking to people is nice and actually getting to see names for all the faces that I haven't been able to meet yet at the conference is good. The actual key signing process is very tedious. I think they really need to work on ways to trim down the actual key signing party. Basically what we do in order to make it faster than it used to be is we do print out the pieces of paper and have a checksum that says this is the cryptographic checksum of the document that everybody has printed and then it's read off before the group and everybody agrees that that's the checksum they heard and then one by one we go through and say yes, the information for me on that piece of paper is correct and then before you can sign it and then we also exchange IDs, passports or driver's license depending on different people's standards of ID verification for that and I'm holding up the line now. I don't know because this is the first time I'm ever using this. I'm doing it blindly which I kind of like because then I'll learn all the mistakes as I go along. So why didn't you take part in the key signing? I think it's just too long like when we have like 175 people or 145 people it takes like almost three hours to be there. It's a time thing. Yeah. Like last year I mean I felt last year it was like one and a half hours after we started I just felt totally, I don't know, the name in Spanish is agobiado. Agotado, right? No, agobiado. Agobiado. Agobiado. Like claustrophobic. Oh, okay. Like feeling this ancha and so I just left last year so this year I decided not to participate from the beginning. Why am I not, because this is the first year I have a video camera and I'm trying to objectify the geek world, make them into a static timeless culture by putting them on video. And I like you, do find it a little bit exhausting and strange but I actually really enjoy watching it, the key signing, because it is a chance where everyone can meet everyone else here. And in that sense I think they should do the key signing the first or second day. The problem that that would impose to the key signing is that you haven't had the opportunity to actually meet the person in CSR. True. Maybe more in the middle of the week. This is a little bit towards the end. But it is pretty fun to watch. It's hard to film. But I tried. I tried. We'll see what I'll get. But yeah, I'm there objectifying the geeks. Yeah, but I know passers- I don't know why it is. You know German passers? You could tell a fake one from a real one. No, not really. I probably trust more of a passer than I do. I wouldn't trust more of a passer. It's all just a matter of like probability. Yeah. Okay, so if you think it's okay, minus two and you should check the ideal. Yeah. Good. Good. Good. Good. Good. Good.