 First, I do want to call up one of my faves. Sorry, I'm not supposed to have favorites, Molly, but I have favorites. Molly Crowther has been leading security for Cloud Foundry for the last couple of years and is going to come up on stage and talk a little bit about what she's been up to. Come on stage, Molly. Hey, nice to see you. I don't think we have chairs. I was just going to stand. It's fine. We're standing. It's cool. It's cool. We're going to stand. We can show off your new cakes. Yeah. So I know we only have the one slide. And I'm not going to put you two on the spot. Actually, I am. But Cloud Foundry's security has been busy for the last year. Yeah, we've been extremely busy. I wanted to put up this slide just to give everybody an idea of what all of the open source teams have been up to. It's only been 213 working days since the last summit in Santa Clara. And this is just kind of a smattering of what I could get people to tell me on Friday afternoon about what they've done about the last year. 213 days, really? Yep. Seems way longer. Yeah. And so just in less than a year, you've done a few things, one or two. Yeah, and it means that people who stay up to date with the latest CF deployment get all of this. We're really excited about it. Well, I don't know why everyone is not just like taking photos and an awe. This is an impressive undertaking by anyone. But for us, Cloud Foundry, we talked a lot about the enterprises and running at scale. And one of the core features of that is obviously security. Definitely. I mean, you're getting a platform that's doing a lot for you that you don't have to rely on your teams to do. It allows you to be faster in your teams to be faster because you don't have to put them to work building security into a platform for you. You made a good point. A couple of weeks I heard you talking about this. You made a really good point about the role agility plays. We talk a lot about continuous delivery and CI CD. But what role does that play in security? Yeah, so we've been thinking a lot. And I think the industry is coming to a point where the thing everybody is talking about is shifting security to the left. And that means in the timeline of the delivery of your software, you want to take security from being the gatekeeper at the end and pushing it as far forward in the process as possible so that your developers are thinking about security. They're building security in at the beginning, and it's something that you're delivering through value to your customers rather than just being somebody at the end telling you, no, you can't ship that because I've decided it's not secure. How many people have that security department right now? The latter. The no one. Oh, so everybody's continuous delivery. That's great. That's what I like to hear. See, yes, everyone's already doing agile security. But security is everyone's job, right? Definitely. That's something that we've been working on really hard over the past, I mean, since I've been with Cloud Foundry, one of the cool things that we've been doing this year is traveling around and doing agile security workshops with the different product teams for Cloud Foundry. That helps them shift security to the left in their own part of the product. And it means that we get all of these features coming out of the teams themselves. I'm not running around the world telling Cappy they have to map LDAP roles. That would be super boring for me. I get to go around and talk to teams about why security is important, and this is just what falls out of it. If you could summarize why security is important, really succinctly, how would you? How would you? I think for Cloud Foundry, it's the number one thing because we're enabling developers at all of the companies that are here today, huge productivity gains, right? And when we do that, it means that they're touching more of their customers, they're touching more people around the country and around the world, and we need to keep those people safe. And that's how Cloud Foundry as a platform is enabling security to reach millions more people every day. That's so exciting. So as we think about the future, we talked a lot today about where we're going in 2018 and 2019, where do you see us going with security? It's really exciting. I mean, there's different kinds of threats that are emerging all the time. We're trying to stay agile, trying to stay ahead of those kinds of threats. We're building stronger teams, both kind of within the foundation to understand what's going on, but also building that knowledge within each of the product teams so they can execute themselves quickly and agilely to anything that comes up. It's really exciting. Awesome. That is so awesome. And you've been on fire the last couple of years with notifications around CVEs. How many people of you are... How many of you are on the security channel in Slack? Couple. All right, it should be everybody. But Molly's done a lot of the postings in the security channel in Slack on CVEs and updates and what we're doing to address them. And I think that's been such a phenomenal transparency into the process for an open-source project. Yeah, it's made my job easier and it gets easier over time as people kind of get more used to hearing about there's this problem that you need to update to fix. I think over time, people get a little bit less scared about these particular issues and more confident that they know that they can update really quickly, patch their stem cells. I mean, we patched meltdown inspectors as soon as we had patches available and there were people who were able to fix this horrible issue in their foundation in less than a day. In less than a day? Yeah. Holy cow. Which is, I would say, unprecedented. Yes. That's impressive. Anything you'd like to leave this audience with? Anything, you've spent a lot of time talking about security and agility and how to make it part of your day today. Anything you would like to leave them with? Yeah, I just think that, as you were saying before, security is everyone's job. If we're going to go faster as an industry, people are going to kind of get out of under their compliance teams. They need to understand how to make security, not everyone's problem, but everyone's value proposition. That's awesome. Well, that's a great note to leave everybody on. Everybody's job. Molly, thank you so much for joining us. Yeah, I appreciate it. See you in a little bit. See you in a little bit. Yeah.