 Hi, I'm Dazza Greenwood, a scientist at the MIT Media Lab, and I run the consulting company Civics.com, and as one of the co-organizers of the sovereign legal identity challenge for this weekend's Computational Law and Blockchain Festival, we wanted to make this video to give teams a quick overview and an invitation to join the challenge, and I'm very, very pleased to be joined by one of our esteemed judges on our judging panel to help give a quick overview and introduce yourself, Elizabeth Reneres. Elizabeth? Thanks, Dazza. Hi, my name is Elizabeth Reneres. I'm an attorney with Experience in Blockchain and Digital Identity. I've got a small boutique law practice in Washington, D.C. that's helping to organize the event in D.C. this weekend as part of the Global Challenge, and I also served as Global Policy Council to ever name a digital identity company focused on self-sovereign identity. So the challenge this weekend is about how we operate in a post-equifax world. It's about recognizing that identity, as we know it, is broken, and it's about thinking how we come up with solutions to address the problem that are different from how we've done things in the past. So this particular challenge is about thinking through the principles that should guide how we build identity from the ground up, really, focusing in particular on a new deal on data, on personal data specifically that is user-focused and user-controlled. Should I say more, Dazza? I think that is a good basic overview of what the themes are, and you can learn more on our challenge site, and basically we want to encourage everybody to give it a go. If you're an expert in digital identity, pack the challenge. If you want to learn more, pack the challenge. You can focus on the business model, the legal framework, the technology, architecture implementation, and you can kind of try to include more than one of those in a not-to-exceed, two-minute YouTube presentation and some slides. It's easy to join, it's fun, and if you want to learn more, Elizabeth and I and others will be doing in the learning track on Saturday at 3.30pm Eastern Time, an open dialogue on principles and context for sovereign identity. So with that, we look forward to hacking the law with you this weekend. Let's have fun and create some new ideas. Thank you very much. Thanks everyone.