 Great. Yes, these are things I learned collecting secrets. I did do a research project in an art installation over a couple of years based on collecting other people's secrets and redistributing them. It was done in collaboration with Jessica Yokovsky, who is here today. So everybody, think about something private in your digital life and your text messages, emails, past or present. Do you have something? Yes, everybody does. This project was exploring that, the fact that we have these things that we are leaving traces of, but not necessarily thinking about the future that we're leaving them to. In survey research, we discovered that while people would be very keen to read the emails of their great-grandparents had they kept them, they were less inclined to want their great-grandchildren to read theirs. So we designed this installation where you have a computer that asks you for a secret. And if you type one in and push Enter, there's a little printer that prints somebody else's secret in return that you can then take with you. It's super simple, but it had some more elements. Sometimes it was in a more brightly lit environment, like on the left. Sometimes it was in a dark, more private space, like on the right. There was also sound and projection and some other complicating of the algorithm that we did. It showed internationally. So in those cases, it was adapted in different languages or included different languages. So you see Berlin and Warsaw here. And as a result, I learned a lot of things. So I'm gonna give you just a very brief synopsis of what some of those things are today. And I love how it relates to all these other topics of misinformation and trust and sexting, everything. Secrets are weird and funny. I don't mean this in a judgmental way, but rather in an endearing and appreciative way. People are complex and strange and often don't have an opportunity to share those things with others. People are extremely willing to share secrets in this format. Even after they realize having received someone else's secret that someone else is gonna receive theirs, often people return to the installation enthusiastically to share more. We can't know when a secret is true. We may have an idea that some secrets seem more true some secrets seem less true, but we can't really know which brings up questions about our relationship to information online more broadly. We also make assumptions about other people's secrets or rather the people who submit the secrets. For example, if you read a secret about a bully, you might be maybe more inclined to think it's from a male or if you read a secret about an eating disorder, you might think it's more likely to be from a female. Obviously this is not always the case. I'm gonna give you a little sample of the audio secrets. I killed a bunny when I was seven. I enjoy it. I've lied about my identity, my home. My friend microwaved her hamster and it died. I think Bernie Sanders is handsome. Secrets are also very common. Not surprisingly infidelity is among the highest frequency. There's many others. And yet secrets also can make us feel more connected and bring out our humanness. Technology so often make us feel kind of disembodied and disconnected, but there's something about the sharing and anonymity that we should think about as we bring more technology into our lives. They also make people happy, even the dark ones. And I think that it's probably because when you realize that everybody is fucked up and not just you are fucked up, it kind of makes you feel better. We also tell ourselves stories about what the machines are doing. Anecdotally we heard theories about why people were receiving certain secrets or what was happening with the remote printers and why they got a certain sequence. And this is our inclination is to connect the dots with technologies, but it's useful to shine a light on that inclination itself. Anonymity and intimacy can lead to connection and compassion. Usually we don't have anonymity and intimacy at the same time. And this is something that can be really valuable because you don't know the secrets belong to. And lastly, fragments misrepresent. Obviously if we think about our corpuses of our online data, that's not who we are. That's just one kind of slice or one representation of us. So we should think about how we're leaving information in the world. These are two of my favorite secrets that came in during the duration of the installation. And lastly I want to thank my collaborators on this project and they're listed up here on the screen. Thank you very much.