 We're here in the MIT Media Lab in the atrium where we've been having the GLTL meeting. It's a place where technology and society come together to understand how it is that technology should adapt and what it means for society. We've successfully brought together a broad community of lawyers and technologists globally to share resources and collaborate to solve societal, collective problems. We've laid out a whole bunch of challenges that the legal services industry faces, particularly when it comes to access to justice. And we are looking for ways that technology can play a role in helping fix that gap. We have students who want to do good, to help people, to help small businesses. The ability to do that requires that the lawyers be technologically assisted. We want more lawyers with technology heavily on the side to empower lawyers to be able to represent these people. We find that often entrepreneurs neglect their internal business deals. How are we going to make decisions? Can you sell part of your interest to somebody I don't know? Questions that a lawyer walks you through. Well, you can pay a lawyer an hourly rate to ask you those questions, but we developed a founders term sheet questionnaire with some examples and educational components in it so that budding entrepreneurs can fill it out at home. They don't necessarily have to go to a lawyer's office. It'll get to a lawyer eventually and then they can really refine the terms much more efficiently. Today, we are taking a set of early stage projects and moving them forward, getting input from a number of really high profile people, really switched on people in this space. We had some fantastic input, some great technological and legal minds that really kind of solidify the ideas and more of a concrete goal that we want to do. It was just an amazing day. It's been very productive. I think it's very beneficial to have a venue such as this. It's a lot of different minds coming together. When you reach across a bridge, you get sparks who didn't anticipate and you get innovations you couldn't have predicted. Everyone in this room has done great legal technology projects. The problem is everyone else in the room doesn't really know about them. What we've needed is two things. A network where we can freely and openly communicate with one another and a platform and a repository where we can maintain all of the great work so that they become iterative over time and can be built upon. And if we can memorialize that in a GLTL platform, we've got it made.