 Thank you, Rohan, thanks everyone. I think I'm getting to the best part of the conference, at least my favorite one. Actually my favorite part of the year, as I said, I really enjoy part of what we do, actually Ron didn't mention it, but part of what we do is rewarding our contributors and our members. And so without further ado, you've been waiting all day to hear from Rob who are the actual certified FTC3 providers. Please. Hi, everyone. Hi, yes, I'm back. Right, yes, so as I teased in the keynote earlier, we now have desktop agents passing the FTC3 1.2 conformance tests. And this is a culmination of a huge amount of work from the organizations involved in the testing. So Scott Logic provided implementations of the tests and the whole FTC3 community really came together and defined and approved the test packs. So let's recognize that effort. Please come up on stage and collect your awards for conformance. They are Finos Silvermember Koseiak with their FinSombal product. Woo! Thank you. Thank you. Very well. We've got Tic42 with their Glue42 Enterprise product. And their Glue42 CorePlus browser extension, both making use of GlueFTC3 version 2.60. And also the open source FTC3 sale Finos project being maintained by Nick Colbert and Seba Bax. Nick, can you come up? Thank you, Leslie, congratulations. Thank you. And Nick, last but not least, thank you for your contributions to the standard and to the sales project. Thank you. There you go. Thank you, Rob. It's okay. Thanks for the delivery. Great. This is a milestone for us. This is our first certification program and we're really happy to have our first certified vendors. We expect, as you know, over time to have the 2.0 version certified. So stay tuned as we certify more vendors and more versions of the standard and maybe more standards. Moving on. As I said, it's my favorite part to award the community, but I think James, our director of community, deserve for all the work that is done this year to nurture them. Thank you very much, Gav. So did I hear a clap? I think that's, there we go. So thank you, everybody. So the community within Finos is absolutely growing. You can see that by how many people there are at the end of a long conference. So thank you, everybody, for being here and, you know, add into the success of Finos. Year on year, we're absolutely growing, which actually makes my job of finding award winners a lot more satisfying because the amount of information that there's out there in order to find out who's contributing and who is adding to the success of the foundation is just absolutely phenomenal. So we're going to start with the shining star award. Now this is an award which is given to the project that is demonstrating all of those star clicks in the top right-hand corner of GitHub. So if you're ever using the project and you absolutely kind of want to give it Q-dice, all of those stars do actually count for something. And so within the last year, this project has had like a really sharp spike in the stars that it has received. And so I'd like to call to the stage the legend team. So, legend team, if you're here. Well done, Goldman Sachs team. If you'd like to come up and receive your award, so it's more than one person. Yeah, that's awesome. Yeah, let's move up. Coming up, squeeze in. Congratulations, remarkable effort. And there's a promo code on the back of the frame so you can buy something from the Finos swag store. Now this next award goes to an individual who has been engaging with Finos through marketing channels. So Finos is multi-channel. We encourage engineering in development, but we also love it when people spread the word about the foundation. Because if it isn't for marketing and other people who engage with the foundation and get the word out, the amount of people in this room today wouldn't be as big as it is today. So I would like to present this award to Macau Herskovitz from MEND. And I'm going to present it to some of her colleagues because she couldn't be here with us today. With Finos being an international open source foundation, our colleagues in Israel need their colleagues in the US to claim their awards for them. Thank you very much. Thank you. Now where would we be if it wasn't for all of those people who stand up bold and guide us all in the direction of open source, who actually unlock our own abilities to contribute in a very, very difficult industry, highly regulated? We need people to go into their groups, find the engineers and all of the other people to come on out and actually be part of the financial services open source community. So I would like to present this award, which as part of the DEI SIG, so the Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion SIG, we've really made an effort to get inside all of the OSPOs and other roles. So rather than handing it to engineers, who we can see on the surface of the foundation, I would like to present this award to Cara Delyer from Red Hat, who has been phenomenal in bringing Red Hat right into Finos. So thank you very much, Cara. And Cara is also a co-lead of our open source readiness SIG now. So welcome to the family. So this is an absolutely phenomenal award, the new camera award. We'd like to recognize people who are new to the Finos community and who contribute year on well for the very first time within that annual cycle. It was phenomenal to see this person's contributions into the foundation and the amount of work that they've actually done. So this was recorded in data. And there was a massive spike for both this person and also the firm that they represent. So I would like to present this to Olaf Kolander from Symphony, who is based out of Sweden. And so we have, coming up, Olivier. Sorry, Olivier. Coming up, Olivier. And so a big round of applause for Olaf. And thank you for taking this back to Olaf. Thank you, Olivier. So alongside all of the leads who do amazing work in order to unlock teams for Finos, we need coaches on the ground who actually show other developers and other people how to get involved in raising poor requests and closing issues. And also answering the questions that they get asked continuously. Now, this is going to more than one person because this group of individuals has been phenomenal. And you have seen the output of that project throughout this conference today. So the coaching award is going to the FDC3 maintainers. So if there are any FDC3 maintainers coming up, Nick, or anybody who would like to represent the company's you know, who they are from, coming up and claim this award on behalf of your maintainers. So you stand in the middle, Nick. He's getting married on. Well done. Coming in. I think you're in front of the microphones there. Come on to your left. You want to come around this side, yeah. Well done. Congratulations and well done for everything that you're doing. It's for the entire maintainer team. We'll figure it out in a minute. Right, so the most active individual is the person who's been contributing continuously into the foundation. So year on year. This is data-led. So everything about this person absolutely lights a spark on everything that they are contributing into the foundation. There is no dispute the amount of work that this person is putting into their project. And so I would like to present the most active individual to Anne Fee from the legend team and from Goldman Sachs. Congratulations. And thank you so much for your contributions. Thank you. And thank you, everybody. Please bring all of your contributors into the foundation. And with that, I'm going to hand back over to Gabb. He's going to be the member awards. Yes. You thought you were done clapping? No. Oh, that's an old picture. I did lose some weight over the pandemic, just in case. So yes, we thank you, James, and thank to all our contributors. I actually need to make sure. I know who am I giving the awards to. Oh, yeah, it's there. Cool. So we talked about community and our projects and our community are the blood of what we do. But of course, our members are what allows us to pay salaries at the end of the day and invest into the growth of this community. So we have a few global member awards. The previous were America's specific. These are throughout the year across all of our members. And we have five awards. We're going to start with the spread award award. Which is again, as James said, about helping us spreading the word and spreading the message. I actually have seen a lot of activity today on social. Every year, this industry opens up to the fact that it's OK to put a tweet out there, I guess. And so I want to award Cinecron for helping us organizing so many events this year. Can someone from the Cinecron team come to us so much for all your contributions? Come here. Thank you. Now, this is one of the most interesting awards. We measure activity of our members across multiple channels. As we discussed today thoroughly, it's not just about commits. But of course, commits are really important. And so this is across our commits, our meetings, our Slack channels, our documentation websites, our events. And so I am very honored, not so far from the headquarters, to announce Goldman Sachs as the most active member for this year. Who better than Rob? Congrats, Rob. Thanks. And thanks for what you will do. Thank you. OK. So leading the pack, as James discussed, is not just about individual contributors. It's not just about being a maintainer, but it's also about teaching others and being a leader in your organization, sorry, in your project. And across projects, honestly. This is an industry that is learning to do open source. There's dos and don'ts. There's weird quirks of open source people that you need to be aware of. And yes, there's also legal and compliance and IP requirements. And so we're seeing our community cross-pollinating more and more. And so I'm really excited to bring on stage Cossack for the leading the pack award. Been busy today, huh? For the outstanding work on FDC3 and so many other projects in Phoenix. Thank you, Sarah, and the whole Cossack team. Thank you. OK. As you said, these are global awards. And I do hope there's someone that will receive this award because this award is not in the US. This member joined us earlier in the year, and they really went all in. They started contributing. They started joining us at our events. They started really massively engaging with our community and leading so many activities. And I actually think we're just at the beginning. So I would like to welcome on stage NatWest Group for our Going All In Awards. Hey, Aaron. Nice to meet you. And thank you so much for what you did, guys. Thank you. You can keep that one. So last but not least, we have folks who are able to contribute and folks that are getting there. And every year, we like to award the company that has made the most inroads in the open-source readiness journey. This company rolled their most open-source program office today this year, as many we've seen. But we also have received our first contribution from this company that are able now to contribute. And so I'm very, very excited to award Bank of Montreal with our Breaking the Stated Squad Award. Anyone? Mike? OK. I guess I'm going to take it back. Well, I'm sure Kim and Mike will be happy to see it. Do you mind taking a picture? Thank you, everyone, for your support. Whoever is a member for your financial support, then whoever is a contributor for your time and effort. So you thought we were done. No, we're not. Just a couple of closing remarks. I showed these slides at a FinTech conference a couple of months ago to show how much fighting there is going on here. We always discuss regulation versus deregulation. It's legacy versus blockchains. It's the banks versus the FinTechs. Every failed, and I guess that slide didn't age well after FTX. But anyway, the reason why I'm bringing this up is that we have seen open source bringing folks together. And it's not just from a sort of people perspective. But when I joined this industry six years ago, I was really not familiar with a lot of the complexities. And it seemed to me that open source had an opportunity to really harmonize an industry that is very much siloed. And as I see FinTechs popping out right and left, I'm starting to get the distinct feeling that we're moving from a centralized mess to a decentralized mess or from a centralized silo to a decentralized silo. And this goes back to what I was saying this morning that we want to see more FinTechs join the party. Because if we start adopting common APIs, common standards, and ideally, all common open source components, think about for regulation, that is going to create a very different environment and really a new generation of financial services. I mean, don't get me wrong. There's plenty of financial open source projects out there. I mean, I'm not sure what an open source repository is. There's plenty of code out there. But the role of our foundation is to make sure that we are able to bring it together in a harmonized way in a way that looks more like this, for example. Have more and more of the layers in this industry being powered by open source. And again, these are just examples. Don't be married exactly to the project. But just to say that in the foundation and out there, there's a lot of valuable code that you don't need to rebuild. And as a foundation, we can ensure that it's not in the wild that we can support it. So if you're maintaining or you know of a valuable open source project out there, we're experiencing massive growth. So bring it to our attention. And hopefully, we can help both the maintainers, as well as the sustainability and security of that project, because there's a good chance that maybe you're already depending on it. And so really wrapping this time almost. We need your help. There's few little things that you can start doing, or big things. If you can contribute, go to our community website. It's extensive documentation on how you can get started. It goes through a journey of, really, how can you learn more about us? To how you can engage in contribution? How you can become a leader in our foundation? Contribution is open to everyone. You don't need to be a member. I want to make it clear. I forgot to actually mention that. Of course, consumption is also free. This is open source. But if you can't contribute just yet, sign up for our newsletter. Get updated from our news. Check out resources.finals.org. You're going to see on the back of all these project expos, we're really trying to put our projects in the context of production use cases. So you're going to see more and more success stories. But we already have a legend case study and a perspective case study. Take a look if that helps selling the value of open source within your organization. And ultimately, it takes some belief. When we started six years ago, we didn't really think that we would get here. We hoped. We had a vision. But I am really excited. And I want to really thank the whole Finals team for the fantastic job here and all the members. And most importantly, you guys help us out. It's not going to always be easy. So you've got to put some belief. I think that loss was pretty appropriate here. And as we wrap, finally, we do have the reception tonight. We're almost running out of spots. Here's the QR code in case you want to get registered and join us after this. But before I do that, now for reals, I'll let you go. But I want to bring on stage Jamie Siegel from the Ipon Innovation Network to give us a quick closing remark. Take your time. OAN is sponsoring the reception out here. And they are good friends of Finals and the Linux Foundation. So thanks for being on stage, Jamie. Thank you. Hi, good evening. I have the unenviable position of standing between you and drinks. So I will make it short. I'm Jamie Siegel. I'm the global lead of licensing for the Open Invention Network. For those of you that don't know us, we're a community of over 3,700 companies that have all joined our community for free in pursuit of our mission, which is to protect open source. Open source being open. Open Invention Network was started back in 2005 by Sony, Philips, NEC, SUSE, Red Hat, IBM. And they did that with the idea of bringing some actual teeth to the idea that open source would remain free in a world of intellectual property. And we grow. And our members all promise to cross license each other with their patents related to the low tech stack of open source. And it's a great organization. Many of your members or already members, including GitHub, SMBC, RBC, and financial services in particular in just the last few months, we've added Bank of America, the Clearinghouse, Scotiabank. We have Barclays, TD Bank, many other financial companies as the whole industry is coming. I mean, just this organization being six years old. The whole industry is really jumping into open source in a very big way. And they're finally waking up that we need to be protected against aggressors in the space. So I highly encourage anybody to reach out. We're on the internet. I'll be around at the cocktail party, along with some of my colleagues. And in the words of the head of IP at TD Bank, he said, this is really a no-brainer. I don't understand why everybody hasn't joined already. So with that said, please enjoy your drinks. And every time you take a sip, remind yourself to join OIN. I think we are done here. Thank you so much. And enjoy the drinks. Please make connections. And please follow up on this. This is just the beginning. Thank you.