 This year, we're compiling audience feedback on the voting village speaker track. If you have any comments or feedback on any of our speakers' presentations, please reach out via Discord or send an email to votingmachinevillage at gmail.com. Further details can be found on Discord and via Twitter at votingvillage.dc. Our next presentation is from panelists David and Bordino, Brigadier General William Hartman, Matthew Masterson, Cynthia Kaiser, Maurice Turner, and moderator Bryson Bort. David and Bordino is a senior executive at the National Security Agency, currently serving as the NSA election security lead. In this role, he is responsible for overseeing agency activities and partnerships in support of securing the 2020 U.S. elections. He has been with the NSA for over 18 years, serving in various organizational, operational, and project leadership roles in areas such as counterterrorism, cybersecurity, counterintelligence, and computer network operations. Brigadier General William Hartman assumed the position of commander, Cyber National Mission Force, on August 21, 2019. In this role, he serves the election security lead for the commander, U.S. Cyber Command. He coordinates the prevention of and response to cyber incidents and campaigns perpetrated by threat actors in order to preserve U.S. critical infrastructure and key resources. Matt Masterson currently serves as senior cybersecurity advisor at the Department of Homeland Security, where he focuses on election security issues. He previously served as a commissioner at the Election Assistance Commission from December 2014 until March 2018, including serving as the commission's chairman in 2017 and 2018. Cynthia Kaiser is the FBI's deputy chief of analysis for national security cyber threats. She has covered technology and counterintelligence issues for over 14 years for the FBI and has served as an FBI lead for cyber threats to elections since 2017. In this role, she has led election threat analysis, met regularly with state and local election officials, promoted information sharing across all levels of government, and collaborated with partners to help place the FBI in the best possible position to impose risks and consequences on cyber actors seeking to interfere in our elections. Maurice Turner is senior advisor to the executive director at the U.S. Election Assistance Commission, providing subject matter expertise in support of local, state, and federal partners to administer elections fairly and securely. Most recently, Turner was deputy director of the Internet Architecture Project at the Center for Democracy and Technology, where he led the Election Security and Privacy Project. Turner also served as a tech congress congressional innovation fellow assigned to the U.S. Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee. Our moderator today is Bryson Bort. Bryson is founder of Scythe, a startup building a next generation attack emulation platform, and Grimm, a boutique cybersecurity consultancy. He is also co-founder of the ICS Village, a nonprofit advancing awareness of industrial control system security. He is a senior fellow for cybersecurity and national security at R Street and the National Security Institute, and is an advisor to the Army Cyber Institute and DHS Scythe.