 Commotion is a transformative new communications technology that interconnects the devices that we already use every day. Our cell phones, our laptops, Wi-Fi routers to form a distributed local peer-to-peer network for spreading information. So the way commotion works, traditionally, a lot of our communications are like your cell phone, where all communications go up through a cell tower. In essence, it's like a hub and spoke, and you can think of it as every spoke on this wheel connects to the central hub. And this is great if you want to bill for those communications, or if you want to surveil those communications. Commotion works more like a spider web, with many different avenues, many different linkages between any two points. And in essence, it creates this peer-to-peer infrastructure that's incredibly cheap, very difficult to surveil, and it's also easy to build out of whatever technology, whatever hardware happens to be available on the ground right now. Commotion helps by creating low-cost communications, either in spaces that don't have any communications whatsoever, say a desert island or in a place after a natural disaster, but also by securing communications so that surveillance censorship become much more difficult. For those that want to help, commotion has just released our beta version, and we're looking for people to bang on it, find all of the problems, report them back to us, and help harden the technology so that when people have their lives on the line, when we release version 1.0, it's the strongest, best software on the planet.