 My name is Keith Boccaro and I'm a fellow at the Brooklyn Klein Center. The big part of my work focuses on like how legal norms form in a digitizing society and so that sounds sort of high pine the sky type. So the narrow question that I'm working on here is how can communities kind of take control and make decisions about the data that they're creating and the data that's being created about them. So the research question that I'm working on within that is how can we use existing vehicles like trusts as a way to first give communities power to be able to make these decisions and be able to sort of protect it against uses that they don't want. But then the other side of that is once you've given communities that power, how do you help them understand sort of what the surface area of those decisions are and how to understand what the ramifications of some other decisions might be. I kind of think of it as two sides of a coin. So on the one side of the coin it's how can we use law to deal with new technology to deal with the fact that it increasingly more of our lives are digital or online. And then the other side of that is how can you use technology to understand how complicated systems work like law or like anything else. And especially for people who don't have the time to sort of think about this professionally. So for somebody who is just facing a legal issue for the first time or just finding out that somebody is doing a census in their neighborhood. The expectation that we should have is not that they should become a lawyer, they should go to law school, they should learn about how databases work. But it should be what can we use and what interfaces, what explanations, what structures can we use to help people understand enough of the system to be able to make an informed decision about how it should work.