 Hello everyone. Thanks for having me and thanks for taking time for my brief story about friendship. Because it's my first time here at Foster, shame on me. Give me a few seconds to introduce myself. My name is Stefan Luku and I was born in the late 60s. I started doing my first IT business in the mid 90s. At this time we built static HTML websites with, I don't know if you know it, BB Edit or DreamBeaver. And tested it with Netscape Gold and such stuff from the early years from the internet. Later on I found software called content management systems. And at this time we are able to build dynamic websites. I tried several from the CMS and after some experience I had a place to stay and it's called Drupal. I don't know if you know it, it's Drupal CMS. Doing stuff with CMS was a time I've realized that contribution to open source is not only contribution in code. It's more about find your place to contribute. Thank you, volunteers for Foster. I was the organizer of the Drupal Meetup in Berlin for several years. I was the organizer of Linux Tag for Booth for Drupal. And later on in 2010 I have maybe too much time. I'm a candidate for the member of the board for the German Drupal Association. Today I work for my own company for the development of it and I'm the president of the CMS garden. That's enough for me. What is CMS garden? We started as an initiative, a marketing initiative for the most active content management systems. And today we have more than 10 members from different CMS in our CMS garden association. Let me rewind the time a little bit. It was in the mid of the zero years. As I told you before, I was a proud community member of Drupal. And I found a situation inside the whole of the CMSs. We had an inner circle and we had the outer one. We are kind of competitors. And this picture is taken from Linux Tag I think in 2007 or 2008. And we had neighbors from Type 3 and they had an orange booth and we are in blue. And we have the blue balloons. And because the Type 3 community is... We stay later on the fair and we decorated the orange booth with our blue balloons. And the next morning we had friends know we kicked Type 3 as well. The feeling of the time, maybe you know it, what I mean. In 2012, a German hosting provider invites us and other different communities to have a joint booth and to spread the word about open source on his booth. And if you recognize, we had word press between Drupal and Type 3. But we leave with fair as friends. We shared our t-shirts. At the same time, we had a great talk to Wolfgang Frank. Wolfgang Frank is the organizer of the open source park at Siebert. And he's a true supporter of the idea of open source. And he invites us to have an own booth at Siebert with a shared CMS joint space. And that was a great idea because we want our own booth without a sponsor logo up there. But booth at Siebert, it's more about 50,000 euros. And the content management associations won't spend so much money. So we had to collect money and our idea was to print a book. We called it Garden Feeble or CMS Gardener's Guide and sell ad space inside. Ten minutes. At the end, we got so much money that we can pay for a booth and rented ten hostel rooms for takeover the coasts for the ambassadors. We rented a chef and a conference space. So it's a little bit dark. We had an 80 square meter booth at Siebert. Every day after the fair, we came together and eat fresh meals, making our day work. And it happens that a group guy looks over the shoulder of a jumler guy and they talk about the concept of the different CMS. And after the Siebert, we had new friends. More than 50,000 euros, eight different CMS, 50 ambassadors, 10,000 from the booklet and one crazy competition, which CMS snores loudest. In 2013, we founded our CMS Garden Association and decided to rule over. This one here is taken in 2014. Bigger, louder. 120 square meters up to 10,000 from the books. 50 or 60 ambassadors and many talks to different event organizers from other fairs and conferences. At the end of 2014, we had more than 25 events which CMS Garden was on site. Because of the core team, there's less than 15 active people, we decided, okay, public relations or marketing initiative for the most active open source content management systems, check what else can we do. And we found new target groups at our fairs and events. And I have to look what is in English. Federal Office for Information Security asked us to help writing the second edition from the CMS Security Study. And we know the guys from Initiative S. It's a project in Germany for making websites safer. We are invited from World Hosting Days. It's a trade fair for the biggest trade fair in the world for the hosting industries. And we talked to the target group We've heard that there is a need for securing the CMS outside in the world. So our next focus was to switch to what can we do as CMS communities to make the Internet a safer place because of the missing updates from lazy people who won't update their CMS. And we partnered with ECHO. ECHO is the Association for the Internet Industry, I think. And we wrote and grant application for Cyvecos in short, in long, it's secure websites and content management systems. And we was accepted in 2016 from the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy. What is Cyvecos? Or Cyvecos? Three parts. One part is a scanner from outside to look after known security bugs. Five minutes. The second one is a plug-in for a deeper look from inside the content management system. And the third one is a project we call it Hoster Service. You can imagine the Hoster Service. Every time a security update for one of the CMS was released Cyvecos gives more security firewall rules to the hosting partners to secure the lazy and not updated CMS. Because it's what's public money, it's public code if you are interested in what we're doing with maybe your money, if you're from Germany, then go to GitHub Cyvecos. What's next in 2019? At this time, one of our friends from the Joomla world is in Chicago on the CMS Security Summit from Google. Heather Burns, formerly from the WordPress community, is leading a cross-CMS working group for GDPR. We partnered with CloudFest and built up in Hackathon. If you'll never ever be at CloudFest, it's a great event in March in Europa Park Rust. And you can join us at the Internet World Expo and at the end of the year, save the date. It's our fifth, fourth, I have no idea, maybe sixth edition of the CMS Garden Unconference in Essen. For me, it's important that you understand nothing from this could be happened if there's only one community. We had to join forces, we have to know and to recognize that we're not a competitor, we're competing each other, we are now friends, and we had the chance, and we took the chance to be more together. For me, it's important to talk to you here at Foster because in the last years we had our border and our German language. We want to share the idea of friendship with other countries, other communities, and in other languages. So I hope you understand the idea. If you're a friend next to you, maybe it's your friend.