 Hi, my name is Matthew Griglia and I'm a Senior Policy Analyst at the Electronic Frontier Foundation. And in case you haven't heard, San Francisco is going to have a ballot measure called Proposition E that would gut our landmark 2019 law. This is if police want to acquire and use new surveillance technologies, they have to bring it into a democratically controlled process. This law was really important because it protected the privacy and safety of San Franciscans by saying that police couldn't use untested technology on the streets of the city without going to the Board of Supervisors for approval first and also providing a use policy and allowing for public comment on these new technology. If a majority of San Francisco voters approve this ballot measure, it would mean that police department could use any technology they wanted for a full year without oversight. But don't take my word for it. Listen to this. I'm going to go through a quick overview of the ballot measure and then we have the Chief of Police here as well where we can help answer questions. Okay, here comes the important part. And remember, this is a member of the mayor's staff talking to the Board of Supervisors at the end of 2023. Authorizes the department to have a one year pilot period to experiment, to work through new technologies to see how they work. Okay, did you hear that? That's a member of the mayor's staff saying that police need a full year to experiment with technologies to see how they work. But San Franciscans are not guinea pigs and we are not lab rats. Police should know how technology works, if it works, and what impact it's going to have on communities before it deploys them without any oversight for a full year. And this is an absolute recipe for civil rights violations and an increase in discriminatory policing. Don't worry though, there is something we can do about this but we have to start acting now. The first is to make sure we get the word out that people vote no on their March 5th ballot on Proposition E. That's the policing ballot measure we're trying to defeat. The other thing people can do is join EFF and a number of other Bay Area organizations trying to team together to beat Proposition E on March 5th.