 One of the things that we've learned to do is to structure our work in movements. This helps a lot of groups work together on shared goals in the long term. Think of very successful large-scale movements like the Free Software Movement or Open Source or Web 3. Those are large-scale movements. Those systems start as small groups, sometimes even one person, creating a set of values, orienting a community, and painting a vision. A lot of the key parts of today's infrastructure has been built by many groups coordinating together through these movements. Now, when you think about having long-term impact, projects are great. However, movements may have much broader success. So we've started to think about how to approach some of this movement building in a faster pace. And we found an extremely useful format that we hope you will try. A periodic in-person conference, multiple times a year with many local pop-ups in various other events, can create a very strong forcing functions for a community to get together frequently, connect with each other, share ideas, discuss things, and get to a point where they're looking forward to the next major conference to release new projects, release, announce things, and so on. So this has been extremely, extremely effective. And of course, we learned a lot from this from major conferences across many other ecosystems. Today you'll hear about three movements that we've been pretty excited to be part of. And yeah, I hope you enjoy. Hello, everyone. My name's Matt. Very excited to talk to you about finding the comments, the idea which became an event series, which became much more than that, more of a movement. So why funding the comments? Why do we start this? I think Juan has done a great job of explaining this. We truly believe that protection and creation of public goods and comments represents some of the biggest problems of our time. Anything from maintaining our parks, our utilities, our basic infrastructure to the existential risks that we as civilization need to face, AI risk, climate, digital human rights. And we really think that we're at an inflection point where crypto and Web3 foundations make global effective cooperation systems possible. But we can't do it alone. We have our own internal efforts, but we know that we need a community of builders, of thinkers, of investors to actually make these systems come to life. So what does one year of funding the comments look like? It looks like four events we've done in person to online. We have over 1,300 attendees across these events, including 700 people in person. We've also brought over 120 speakers from leading institutions into our community, and they've generated over 90 talks and other knowledge artifacts like white papers, blog posts, and just discussions on hallway tracks have been very valuable. And this is all spawned out of an idea that actually came out last week. So since then we've really built out a dedicated team, we've run and moved to large in person flagship events, and we're really excited for what's to come. But beyond just the numbers, I think the impact that's been created by this movement is much broader. We've created new and stronger collaborations across the community. We've seen a really strong event partnership form with Shelling Point and Gitcoin, who are also leaders in the space, among our many other partners with events. We've seen new working groups formed by the community tackling some of these important problems that we've outlined. I'll point a few out, Hypersurts, the collaboration with Kevin O'Walkie and Supermodular with our team led by Holka. We've also seen a lot of important work done with governance institutions. So the radical exchange community has been very important there. And also we've seen a good amount of momentum with the Taiwan-led institution, GovZero, where we've been working on that, particular among many others. And finally, we've really seen it as kind of a point where we've been able to strengthen connections with some really cutting-edge, worldly institutions. So existing friends in Web3 who are really mission aligned. We've also seen cutting-edge think tanks institutions like Convergent Research and Smith Futures, where we're really strengthening those connections. We've also brought leaders to the cause across Web3 researchers, investors, and beyond. So what comes next? In 2023, we plan on growing the events. We plan on hosting two more flagship events, eight smaller events with partners, and then 12 local community events as well. We plan on growing the community with a focus on academic and Web3 partners. And finally, we want to scale action through hackathons, builder funding support, and partnerships. But I want to call attention to three specific things. We want to basically spur open-source development on impact evaluators, hyper-certificates, and performance evaluation. So to learn more, we have an event here in two days and encourage you all to come. Thank you. Our goal of this summit is to bring together the people in the world who are the most knowledgeable about sustainability and about Web3, to build tools to decarbonize the global economy faster than is possible without Web3. I am most excited about continuing to meet all of the people that have come to the Sustainable Blockchain Summit that are like-minded and interested in building a better space. We're hitting this inflection point where now there's tens of thousands of scientists and builders, entrepreneurs and artists, and just people all around the world coming into Web3 and crypto to play around with the primitives to try building things and to try and use these kind of magical superpowers. Think of movement building, think of joining and participating in movements, just resonating with ideas, propagating memes, working on projects, helping each other, all of those things go a long way. My name's Carla and I'm excited to be here to speak with you today about a movement that Protocol Labs has the privilege of participating in but that extends far beyond the outer reaches of our network, the decentralized science movement or DSI to its friends. And I think the DSI movement is a community of researchers, research funders, tool builders, communicators and advocates building an infrastructure and an ecosystem for permissionless science. So the DSI movement is new, but it has deep roots in the history and philosophy of science. It began with the observation that while humanity has enjoyed tremendous progress in what science and technology have produced, which you can see in these very carefully chosen milestones at the top of this slide, we have seen less radical progress in how we produce science and technology. So the scientific community started out as a society of letters. The early forms of scientific communication looked a lot more like an email or a Twitter protocol. And then we had the evolution, the development of science becoming encapsulated in research journals with the introduction of peer review as a standardized part of the scientific process. Now with the development of preprint repositories like archive for the physical sciences or bio archive for the biological sciences, which really had a huge explosive growth during the COVID crisis, we're returning to the permissionless model of an earlier era. And the development of cloud laboratories like Emerald Cloud Lab democratize access to scientific infrastructure. And it's an important part of this decentralization process. So the decentralized science ecosystem is also accordingly experiencing explosive growth and continuing on a trajectory of explosive growth with innovations in governance like the creation of self-assembling and self-governing scientific societies in communication with new ways of sharing scientific knowledge, new funding models, like the very highly successful Gitcoin DSI rounds that PL had the privilege of sponsoring and also even new ways of working in the field or at the bench. So the DSI community has established a regular cadence of really high energy events where we checkpoint our progress and we share new ideas and opportunities. You can see pictures from last meetings, DSI Berlin, ETH Amsterdam, ETH Denver, DSI Boston, the upcoming DSI London. If this movement excites you and it should, you can come to talk me at the break. You can follow the QR code to be led to a discord server. We can round you to other resources and please join the DSI track at IPFS camp and the DSI events later this week. Thank you.