 Hi everybody. I'm Oynher and when I'm grown up, I'm going to be a mine security expert, I guess. Because what I'm interested in is mine hacking. How mines can be hacked, how they are vulnerable to hacks, what attacks can be carried out on mines and what can be done on this. So this is about hacking mines, not computers, because somehow mines are like computers, you know. You know this and what is like a computer can be hacked actually and we can hack things. We can find out where they are vulnerable and I'm telling you a little story on this. I'm telling you a story from Dan Dennett, what ants and there is this ant which walks up a blade of grass and it walks up and it falls down and it walks up again, it falls down again. And what's in it for the ant? Why does it do this? Why would it walk up that way? Well actually it's not an ant, it's an SUV for a parasite that's nested in the ant's brain and drives it up the blade of grass and it's not the ant that's controlling this and the question is of course, can this happen to humans as well? Can this happen to us? How can this happen to us? And of course it's not the parasite in this case of humans, it's ideas that hack us and I really don't like to be an SUV for an idea that I'm not aware of and I really don't like to be hacked and not aware of it. I don't want to be driven in a wall by some idea just because I don't know it just because I was hacked of course. And have you ever participated in a shouting match where it was more important to win than to convince? What happened to you? I guess I did because this is how we sometimes do discussions and the problem with this is of course you don't convince people of your point of view by telling them that they're wrong. You never attack a system where the other side expects you to attack. You have to do something else to hack somebody. You have to go inside, you have to understand them and get inside the system and then you can hack it, that's how you do a hack. You don't attack where it's expected. And the problem of course is that when you are in a discussion the other side doesn't see itself as being wrong. Nobody sees an idiot in the mirror. Nobody sees somebody in the mirror that is wrong. Nobody sees himself that way. So if we want to hack people, if we want to convince people we need to do something else. We need to do more than just telling them. Some people should see an idiot in the mirror I think. And how do we do that? We don't do that by telling them they're an idiot because then we're building enemy lines and we have the point of view of an enemy towards us and we can't do anything. So we have to do it another way. We have to hack them like a hacker does in a real attack scenario. We have to do it right. We have to find the vulnerability and do it that way. And this is a big question because it's not easy of course to hack people because the brain is much more complex than a normal computer because it's a black box. We have some inputs. The brain has a state that we don't know and some outputs. But we don't really know what happens in between. Where would you turn to find out more about this black box? And this is what we like to do. We turn to science of course because there are many scientists who manipulate inputs towards brains and figure out what's happening and figure out what outputs come out on the other side. And science is the place to go. There's a lot out there. But the problem is it looks like this. It's more like books and publications and it's not easily accessible to us to find out how are we vulnerable, what attack scenarios are possible, what hacks are possible. And we don't like this actually. So we started this project mindhacking.org and we want to build a website that easily and accessibly provides people with the vulnerabilities of their minds and how the minds can be attacked and how they can protect themselves against them. And of course we want to play, we want to hack people. So this is a call for participation. We are two at the moment, two of us, and we'd like to have many more of you because all of you in this room here you know much more than the two of us do and we'd like you to participate in this. So we need two kinds of people to help us out. We need researchers. We need people who help us go through this scientific material, figure out what hacks are in there, get them out and provide them in an accessible manner for people on our website and aggregate the information in a way that actually helps us to understand it easier and understand the vulnerabilities that actually are there. And of course we need developers. We need to make the site in a way that is accessible to people. It's simple to use and an interface that is simple to use for people so they can actually be informed that way. Because we believe that in educating people about the vulnerabilities of our minds and how they can be hacked, we can inoculate them against that and we can give control of our ideas a little bit back to people. We want not to become SUVs, we want to be in control of ourselves, what we like to do. And with this I'm leaving you here. You can reach us at mindhacking.org. I'm Eulenher on Twitter and this right here is Mochtu who will be at the conference and well, thanks.