 Hi, I'm Tricia Cruz. I'm the executive director of data site and some of you might have heard of data site We're a not-for-profit global initiative, a member organization We have about a hundred and fifty members worldwide right now and working with about 1600 data centers and creating 14 million DOIs for the outputs of research One of the things that we really focus on is being open and Whether it's open source open development and it's a challenge and that It's how you get this global community to work together and focus on what they want to do and how we can do it in the open And one of the things that we're really focused on is being collaborative and being collaborative with all kinds of partners who can help further our mission of making research data Discoverable accessible usable and being able to connect it to all those different parts of research with confidence and that's and with trust Whoops, so I just popped this slide in here kind of Thinking about what Chuck was saying is we often operate behind the scenes and we're we think of ourselves as a trusted PID registry Along with cross-ref and orchid And we have a shared goal of providing open connected scholarly infrastructure to benefit researchers in an open way And we often operate behind the scenes people Researchers don't often see us, but they know when they get a DOI for example that it's something valuable in it that they can use Focusing real specifically on what data site does We're working on connecting data to data and thinking about that data and those outputs of research Whether it's an image a text file a piece of software connecting all of those pieces together And then connecting that to the researchers connecting that to the grants and project and funding organizations And then data to the publications as well And how we make these connections happen, I just want to highlight a couple of projects is The first is the Freya project it's a three-year funded initiative coming out of the European Commission under the horizon 2020 and Making sure that our persistent identifiers are are integrated and interoperate across a vast ecosystem And thinking about connecting again going back to that little circle thing People places and things whether those are instruments software physical samples field stations and more Another thing that we're just launching along with Crossref and the California Digital Library And that's it really a community-run initiative is the research Organization registry and this is to create identifiers for research organizations So those research organizations can be connected to publications and and data Yay And another thing is something called re3 data It's a searchable catalog of research data repositories from around the world And we're working with the AGU to really focus that tool on building a repository recommender tool So people can say oh, where should I put my data? We can say oh, here's a good place to put your data It means these fair guidelines The last thing is the make data count project and this is working with the California Digital Library and data one Of creating usage metrics and data citations associated with data sets So again to to push data as a first-class citizen So when somebody is looking at a research data set they can say this has been downloaded this many times This is connecting to this particular publications. Here's how many citations are associated with it This is a live right now. So if you Google make data count, you'll be able to figure out how to how to do that The last thing I want to talk about is a plug For this is a hot off the press book that came together with people in this room John Shadaki and Jennifer Lim but also People from around the world supporting research communications It's a guide to some of the things that that you need to think about when supporting research communications So I invite everybody to be the first to to look at this and comment on it. That's it