 Hi, my name is Jordan Pollock, and I'm a professor at Brandeis University, and I was asked by Dave Weinberg, his daughter, to talk about the future of the internet at the Berkman at 10 celebration. And a friend of mine, Bob Metcalf, got in trouble for predicting the doom in the end of the internet, I think in the early 90s, and it never came to pass, and it was one of his predictions which failed. And yesterday, Jonathan Zittrain also predicted with the cover of his book that was going off the rails, that every good voluntary generative organization essentially gets invaded by evil doxiders who you spam or who violate protocol, who become anti-social and bring things down. I'm much more optimistic. I actually believe that we're moving into an era where our own computers and mobile devices are on 24 by 7 with enough bandwidth, with enough storage, that we can essentially take control over our own communications, our own interactions, and open up channels between people, people that know each other, and transfer information that's using peer-to-peer, not expressly for the purpose of theft, but for the purpose of private communication, as guaranteed under our First Amendment. Is it First Amendment or Second Amendment? First Amendment. Yeah, that's what I thought. Second has to do with guns or something. Anyway, and and I also believe there's a great future for educating the world over the network as more and more kids get their mobile phones or their calculators online or even one laptops, the opportunity for educational knowledge to spread is greater and greater. And so I tend to be very optimistic that with increasing power, bandwidth storage, and peer-to-peer protocols that will be free from the spying and the intrusion, the, you know, the corporate laws that try to trap us into using their products and so forth, as we move into the future. Thank you very much.