 Hi, I'm Rachel Kowler. I'm Sarah Newman and this is an exhibit of our piece called Nobody's Listening. The piece is about what happens to our data now and in the future and whether and why we willingly share that data with digital devices and what sorts of meaning humans or non-humans might make of our private information. Here is our key answer which asks do you have a secret and if you have a secret you can type it here. Then they're adapted into computerized voices that come out at intervals that you can't predict and you don't know if and when your secret's going to be heard in the gallery. I love to spend that whole day feeling at home. And then there's a live feed of secrets printing out again at intervals that you can't predict. So there's a lot more data happening and you're kind of in the midst of it as a way to push on still our relationship to intelligent systems and our reliance on them, our dependence on them and also maybe predicting a future in which they have more of our secrets or even have secrets of their own and what that might feel and look like. I think that it's scary to think about all of our data being out there and available to data brokers, to companies, to anybody to collect it. And I think that bringing it into formats like this allow us to think about these things differently rather than commoditizing our speech and our own internal thoughts. It presents it as a shared experience.