 I've been really excited to talk to the Bitdefender people about a product called Bitdefender Box. The Nocellic Asteroids are very security conscious, so this sounds like it might be something right up our alley. I'm talking to Dan Bertie right now. Hi, how are you? I'm doing good. Thanks. So, yeah, what we have here is something that we announced a couple of years ago. This is our second generation product, Bitdefender Box, which is a kind of a hardware security all included for the smart home. Ah. So one of the craziest things is people don't realize they live in a smart home yet. It's something that we still kind of figured out and kind of pointed out. I have a smart home. I just have cameras and locks and things sprinkled all over and my lights turned on and off for me. There you go. 27 devices on average per household is that what we're seeing. It's kind of crazy. Yeah, yeah. So what we're doing here at CS 2019 is we're using all the experience and all the knowledge that we gathered with this product and unpacking the technology within to make it available to everybody around here because if you look around this in the smart home sector, everybody sells a device or another that's connected in a formal shape. So what problem does a Bitdefender Box solve? Right. So to oversimplify it, when you install an antivirus on your PC to keep the bad guys out and the viruses out, this is pretty much the same thing, but obviously more complex than so much better. The challenges are for connected devices on the network is that you can't install anything on them. You can't install a software bit on a thermostat to make it secure. Right. So the way that this works is we had to go, as a software company, how to go and invent a hardware device, which was totally out of our comfort zone, a device that sits on the network acts like a firewall or a protection security device. It looks like a multi-level, a multi-technologies and multi-points of security issues that your device is my face. Okay, so I've already got a firewall on my router. So this is more than a firewall, though. Yes. This is really just a set of rules that is pretty static. This is kind of a living creature. This is connected to our cloud, and our cloud protects more than 500 million devices worldwide. We've protected more than 2 million IoT devices just the past few weeks. So it basically... So let me draw a little more how this works. Right. So I've got a bunch of cameras. I've got a Nest Protect, I've got an Ecobee thermostat. They're all going through my router. Where does this go on the... Where does this go in that sequence between my router and my modem and all that? Where does that go? You would set this up next to the router. This can also be a router if you wanted it to have like a cabin somewhere, like you could install it there. It's a network device, right? So this would sit next to your Comcast or...? So would it be between my router and my modem? So it's a DHCP kind of a setup situation. So it's not really in between. It kind of becomes the DHCP server in that network. So you would have to stop using DHCP on your regular router? This becomes the DHCP server so traffic can go through it so we can analyze it. Okay. So you'd have to put your router in bridge mode on the other side of it? If you prefer to use it that way, yeah. There's a couple of ways that you can set it up. We can... So yeah. So if you had like a high-end router and you wanted to use its capabilities, a Wi-Fi capabilities, then you would bridge it. But if you had one of those combo modems from your ISP, which isn't great, then you'd probably want to use this as a Wi-Fi device, so this becomes that Wi-Fi device. So then you don't have to bridge it. Okay. So there's a couple of ways you can set it up. Yeah. Okay. So how does it protect an IoT device? Right. So it goes... Anything from, for example, any... Of course, it comes back with Total Security, which hers are classic security product for PCs and Macs and Android. So there's that extra layer. And this on the network basically what happens is anything that has a browser, right? You click on the wrong link, we'll block that. But then it's also a vulnerability assessment. So that means you connect a new device to your network. It shows up in an application called Central that manages Box. And then we run a vulnerability assessment on it. So you know that, for example, there's known issues with it, like there's the full password or whatever have you and then you're informed. Now, of course, most of these threats are blocked. So for example, if you had one of those smart light bulbs like I did that had a telnet server running on it with the default credentials in own open port, there's no way to find that out. So this would tell you and then this would block potential attempts for anomalous connections to that device. Basically what happens is to remember the Mirai botnet, right? So when basically the bad guys took over a bunch of hundreds of thousands of unsuspecting cameras that people have in their homes and use them as computing power to attack other services, they took down Amazon and Twitter and a bunch of other services. So Box would pick that up. Well, we're like, OK, this server, this command center is trying to attack our devices. We'll block those connections and it will prevent spread of this kind of attack. So the information is going to the cloud of what kind of devices I have. And then so going through the Box, you're pushing down something that's blocking that kind of connectivity for a problem that's with a known device on my network? Yeah. It's a mix of things that happen locally and within the cloud for Box. I'm going to give you an example. So for example, the vulnerability assessment is currently done with locally, although we use the same updates from the cloud the latest. So that's the beauty of, because you asked me about the firewall, that's kind of a set rule that just stays that way. This is a living creature just because it gets those updates every time. OK. Well, very good. So for the Box, where do people go to find out more about it? Just you go to our website, bitdefender.com, slash Box, or just go to your favorite retailer and you can sort of sit out there, you know, Amazon, Best Buy. What's the price point on the version two? It's the MSRP is $199 and it includes a year of service, limited number of devices, and then it's $99 a year. But you'll usually find it, there's a deal on it every time at all times. So you'll. Well, that's good. It sounds pretty cool. That's not bad of a price to have a little bit of a peace of mind about all the IoT devices in your home. I appreciate that. We think so too. Thank you. All right. Thank you very much.