 Hi, I'm Brian Nosek, Executive Director of the Center for Open Science. Thank you for your use of the OSF and for your commitment to open science more generally. Like you, the Center for Open Science team has been working at home since the last month, and these times create many new challenges and also new opportunities. If nothing else, the urgency and the scale of the pandemic provides an immediate and very palpable sense of the importance of open science. Posting preprints to communicate knowledge quickly, sharing data and materials to enhance and reuse an aggregation of evidence, and open collaboration to leverage all the available talent and resources to attack and address the problem as effectively as possible. If you search the OSF for coronavirus related content, you'll find that in just February and March more than 400 related projects have been created. More than 11,000 COVID related files have been shared and 150 registrations of new research have been registered to try to increase the rigor and ultimately the transparency of that research. The immediate potential impact of those behaviors is obvious. But now let's imagine that all of research areas are considered important enough to conduct as openly and as collaboratively as we are doing for pandemic related research. The potential doesn't have to be just potential. It can be reality and the work that you are doing on the OSF and related services is changing the culture so that we can be more open, more reproducible, more agile, more inclusive in the scientific process. COS remains committed to making all of our services available to individuals at no charge and to provide those services we rely on financial support from granting agencies and from individual contributors. So we hope that you'll make a contribution however large or small you are able to help us to continue to advance this mission for open science. Thank you again for all the work that you're doing to make open science a reality in your work and in your communities. I hope your families are safe and well.