 I'm John Jordan, Executive Director of the Digital Trust Service at the Province of British Columbia. I'm also the Volunteer Executive Director of the Trust Over IP Foundation. I'm really glad I could be here by video. Of course, because of my injury that left me a quadriplegic, I couldn't make it. And on top of it, I have COVID right now. So, I couldn't be there for two reasons. In British Columbia, we're working on the next generation of services that put people's digital lives in their hands. We strongly believe every person and organization should feel their online interactions are confidential, authentic, and safe so they can work and play online with confidence. When did we get started with this? Well, about five years ago, Stephen Kern and I came across a new model for digital services based on decentralized identifiers and verifiable credentials. We've been trying to solve a long-standing problem. How do businesses get and use their government permits and services online? And when we discovered this model, we were really excited. We wrote up a little story about a taco track and we thought this could be the answer. So, we started in. At the same time, British Columbia was changing its approach to developing software and digital services and made a very strong commitment to make it open by default. So, these two conditions, an open-source project and this new model that we could solve this problem got us started in the direction and we'll talk a little bit more about where we are today. Well, we discovered this approach, but it turned out there was a lot to do. However, we weren't discouraged. In fact, our enthusiasm increased. We believe Hyperledger, Ursa, Indy and Aries represent the richest open-source platform for internet-scale digital services. It's agnostic to protocols, ledgers and credential formats and it's a starting point and this is where we can evolve. Things start out and they don't do everything we'd like them to do, but at least we can evolve the technology in the open world and make it better for all of us. British Columbia supports this vibrant open community and open specifications fully and our efforts are paying off. Our team members have contributed about 30 percent of the Aries code base and we lead the largest framework community, Aries, CloudH and Python, with almost 400 forks and over 80 contributors with adoption worldwide. We also develop and maintain the Aries agent test harness and its mobile version, which runs daily interoperability tests between agents. We're very proud to announce that we've just launched BC Wallet, the world's first open-source public sector digital wallet. It's based on Aries framework JavaScript and Byfold and was developed in full cooperation with the Aries community and a number of jurisdictions. You can now get up and running with your own wallet in less than a day. So please join this thriving community and build a better internet for everyone and here in Dublin, find my colleagues from British Columbia and join the various sessions they are leading. I'd really like to thank Daniela Barbosa and the Hyperledger team for this opportunity. It's a great privilege to be a part of this community and although I can't be there with you physically today, our teammates are there and I'm working hard here in British Columbia. Thank you again and I really appreciate how the community has supported me through this part of my new part of my life and best wishes to all of you. Thank you.