 Hi, my name is Neil Naveen and I'm excited to be here today. Here's a little bit about me. I'm currently 14 years old and I'm a middle schooler. I've been coding for seven years, two of them in Golang. In my free time, I've been avidly solving leak code problems, 500 of them. In addition to my passion for programming, I've written and published two books on Amazon. Outside of academics, I've been practicing jujitsu for four years and I've competed multiple times. I started coding when I was eight on a site called Code Combat. Here, I created AI combatants to fight other bots created by other people. When I turned 11, I was ranked 16th out of around 50,000 players on a multiplayer arena hosted by Code Combat. When I turned 12, I moved on to leakcode.com. Here, I honed my algorithmic coding skills. When I turned 13, I went back to bot programming, this time on a site called Coding Game. Here, the competition was much more fierce, which meant I had to use better algorithms, some of which I had learned from leakcode. For example, when I was creating an ultimate tic-tac-toe AI, I had to use algorithms like Minimax and Monte Carlo search tree to make my code fast and efficient. In this time, I also started to notice my dad contributing to open source. CLI, or GHCLI, is a tool used to interact with the GitHub API directly from the command line without ever having to go to GitHub itself, which I thought was cool. I learned about this when one day I saw my dad doing something strange. Whenever he would be creating a PR, he would always have to go to github.com to finalize it, but today he was doing everything from the command line. I asked him how he was doing this, and he said he was using a tool called CLI. I furthermore inquired what was CLI, and he showed me how CLI allowed him to interact with the GitHub API directly from the command line without him ever having to go to GitHub itself. Another day, I saw him reviewing PRs all from the same person. I asked him who created all those PRs, and he said it was not a person creating those PRs, but a bot, like one of my bots in coding game. But instead of fighting on an ultimate tic-tac-toe board, it had to fight vulnerabilities in your dependencies. Dependabot is a tool used to interact with the GitHub API. I mean, it's a tool that creates fixes whenever any of your dependencies have updates, so your project is always up to date. On a later date, I thought about those two things, Dependabot and CLI. And I wondered, did CLI have Dependabot? It turned out it did not, so I created a fix to add Dependabot to CLI, and it got merged. I was excited. CLI is an important project because many contributors use it, so securing it was key. I hope I've opened a window for young folk like me into the world of open source. Age is not a barrier to entry. If you want to check out my website, hit the QR code. Thank you.