 I just leveled the channel and recruited what I could be part of this hackathon. Oh, is there one on this team? Okay. Thanks. My name is Kevin Sandwall. I'm a musician. I'm working at St. Field and that's why I'm used to watching and coming to the Olympics with a better watching conference to use to go. And I'm a deserter. I visited a competition, a blockchain competition, like earlier this year. It's a few more words. Here, here. And music. This guy has an insanely cool music project. We'll all hear more about later, I hope. So we have one more person at this table, I think we missed. Hi. Hi, I'm Steve. A bit of a mad sign, just leveled a bunch of old hardware. So I run test models on a lot of different groups. Tizzles, arching. Well, arching is a lot of time. You might need that work. Welcome. Just in time for introductions. Can you introduce yourself and say hello? How are you? Great. Welcome. And we have a colleague and long-time collaborator at the Media Lab with us. An attorney, kind of standards maker, James Hazard. Welcome. Introduce yourself and talk a little bit about Common Accord. I don't know where it sees the interesting connections with, potentially with music in the context. Welcome. All right. Thanks, Scott. My name is James Hazard, and I've been doing a project for a very long time called CommonAccord.org, which is, in essence, what if lawyers collaborated on GitHub in the same way that coders collaborated? The fit with music is, and the arts in general, is that there's a lot of IP that gets kicked around. There are a lot of rights that get kicked around. And all of those are one way or another defined in documents. And artists are even more than, say, start-upers or other businesses in the position of having large means for legal documents and very small resources. And there are long chains of illegal property rights that are created through sequences, through chains of documents. If we standardize that, we would take out a bunch of the work, delay, risk, opacity, and even some of the oppression of that. So I'll be doing a little pitch tomorrow, too, to the group. And then I'm doing a workshop here on Wednesday for what's called AI, blockchain, and the future of law. Cool. Thank you. Younieve was right here. Oh, here we go. A member of the family here for the Human Dynamics Lab. Younieve. Yes. I spent three years here at the meeting and doing my personal research. Working together with Professor Sandy Bentman on what later became the theory of social physics. Ando was based on the theory of social physics with the aim of giving access to anyone who can benefit from predicting the future and doesn't have a team of 20 data scientists. So I'm super happy to host all of you today. We're delighted to give access to this technology. We're now open sourcing the very significant portion of it. And welcome everybody. Great. Do we want to hear from others from Andor as well? Daniel. Great. Hi, my name is Younieve Barog. I'm part of the Andor team, of course, and I'm in charge of the business area. So if you have any business questions, please leave me here. Stop. Hey, welcome everybody. We're on the product side. We'll be welcoming you to join the learning sessions. And if you're interested in it, Any questions? Perfect.