 For me, the most significant legacy has been the early public release of data and making data accessible to people who are not generating it for the benefits of scientific research. This was a principle that was established very early on in the Human Genome Project. It was first with the worm, the sequencing of synoditis elegans, and the Human Genome Project set a very high standard with releasing sequence assemblies of greater than two kilobases every night for the people doing the work. That was hard because that meant that our lab books essentially were open to the world. The mistakes that we made were also open to the world and, of course, heavily picked on. But it did enable a lot of research to get underway early before the finished product had been produced. So for me, and in my view, that's actually changed the way we do science. Having data released early in projects now has become standard with sequencing projects and even though many of the projects now have ethical considerations when they're dealing with multiple human genomes, the concept of sharing the data and scientists having open access to it I think has been invaluable.