 My name is Jan Hensuer from NITUG. I'm going to talk about the exciting technology of passwordless organs. Passwords have always been a headache to computer users. Whether it's for private or for business use cases, passwords should be long and complex, therefore hard to remember. They should be unique per login and per website, which is very complicated in practice. Therefore, in reality, depending on the study, 60-90% of all successful hacker attacks are because of passwords or phishing attacks. The solution is to get rid of passwords, which is what we call passwordless login. Instead of a password, you login with a physical key, such as a NITUG FIDL2. Since there are no passwords anymore, the passwords can't be stolen. That's phishing protection integrated. During registration to an account and later on the login to an account, the web service is compared. If it doesn't match, it doesn't log in. This is a very effective phishing protection that can be used as a single-factor login or for two-factor authentication. In the later case, a device pin is used and this is a pin, which means it can be shorter than a password and is still secure. This is a device pin, which means that there is only one per device and you don't need to remember multiple per website or per login. You can use one NITUG FIDL2 or one other physical security token for many websites, usually as many as you want. There is no limit. Here we don't introduce just a better security but also better usability, which is very great for user acceptance. I'm going to demonstrate this with NextCloud. The registration takes 30 seconds. You go to your user account, select Security, add a WebAuthN device, confirm this with your password for the last time and by touching the nitro key. Now you can give a name to distinguish multiple WebAuthN devices and you're done. So the next time you log into NextCloud, you choose to log in with the device. Simply add your username and confirm by touching the nitro key and you're logged in. You see, it's very easy. Passwordless login has been standardized by W3C in 2019. It's called WebAuthSentication or short WebAuthN. It's also known as FIDL2. There's excellent support by current web browsers. All major web browsers support WebAuthN with passwordless login. Firefox, Google Chrome, Chromium, Edge and Safari. Support by web services is still a little bit limited. There's Microsoft, which support passwordless authentication to all their online services such as Office 365. It can also be used to log into local Windows computers when it's managed with Azure Active Directory. Of course it's supported by NextCloud too and by many identity and access management systems. If you're an enterprise, you don't want to have passwordless login and implement it necessarily in your actual enterprise system. Instead you want to have it implemented by your identity and access management system. There's a good chance that your current identity and access management system supports passwordless login already. For enterprises passwordless login is already a reality for consumers. There's not much support other than for Microsoft and NextCloud. At the website dominoes.info you find the overview of websites and services supporting passwordless login. Thank you very much.