 But I just want to show quickly a couple of projects I've been working on and been involved in over the last several months. I work for an organization called Tactical Tech and we are not for profit and we do a lot of work with activists. A lot of the work we do is around privacy and expression, a lot of work around net freedom. We did some fun stuff last year and it's called Me and My Shadow. The idea of this project was to just kind of look at in a fun way what kind of digital traces you're leaving behind every time you're engaging with technology. So we have this one really cool interactive visualization thing where you can go in and go, oh I use Facebook, I use a computer, I use a mobile phone. How much am I giving away? Oh, I'm so screwed. That's fun but one of the other things that we did was actually look at terms of services and privacy policies of different organizations, different online web services we use pretty much every day and kind of figure out what do they actually say. This is Yahoo. There's some stuff about Twitter and stuff. So basically these are long really and nobody wants to read through them but what do they actually say? That's all we really wanted to get to. So this is what we did. That's what it actually says. We've done this with a few of them. This is with Twitter for example. That's an excerpt from the privacy policy sometime around April 2012. It's long, it says a lot of stuff about, oh we don't do this, we don't do this, we don't do this. What do you guys actually do with my stuff? This is what they actually do with your stuff. Anyway, this is not what I want to talk about today. That's one to use, just poke around a bit and play. This is a slightly more serious project I've been involved in a little bit of late and it's called Terms of Service Didn't Read. So like we all do, I do this too. I just click every time I see a checkbox which says I have read Terms of Service and I agree to it and I just go ahead and use the service. But there are times when I really wonder, okay, how do I actually know what these guys are doing without actually having to read through all of this stuff? And that's what this project does. It's a community project where a bunch of people get together and contribute to kind of rating what different TOS for different websites say. The way it works is there's a working group which is a mailing list which anyone can kind of join and contribute data to. And then there's a bunch of browser extensions and an API which let you figure out how these things have been rated. So I have a little Chrome extension here. Do you see that little question mark right up there in my bar? That question mark exists because there's no class that's been assigned to it. The working group's been doing a bunch of work on this and figuring out, okay, this is what Twitter actually does. It deletes your account after 30 days. It keeps it right to your content. That's a bad thing. Twitter provides archives of their Terms. That's kind of a neutral thing. They do a good thing. They promise to inform about data requests. So if someone's a government's asking them for your data, they are going to tell you that they were asked. So it just basically grades different Terms of Services on an A to E scale. A being really good and E being, oh, you guys suck. So a lot of these haven't been graded yet, but yeah, one service that we all kind of like, which has been graded a very high B is GitHub. Most things, they seem to do most things right, except they can change stuff anytime, sometimes without notice. Your personal information is limited, is useful limited purposes. This is what they do with it. And there's a few bad things they do. So yeah, it's just, it's useful sometimes. And it's just something I wanted to bring to everyone's notice because this project could use a lot of help. And I think it's, yeah, it has been helping a lot of people use these services every day. So that's it from me.