 Hey, this is Dazza Kremwood at the MIT Media Lab, a research scientist here, with a quick update end of the week on Go Forward for the MIT Legal Forum. So as promised, we'll be doing some, let me show you, a little screen share. There we go. Doing some of the terrific breakout groups that we had online. So thanks to the facilitators and to so many people that were engaged in the discussion, we've decided to support at least through 2017 a regular Thursday pulse other than holidays and Thursdays at 5.30 p.m. Eastern and 2.30 p.m. Pacific. You can participate in continuation of the small group dialogues. So to do that, just go to the mitlegalforum.org site. We've got our participation form embedded and we've just updated it with the next set of them, which are going to be this Thursday at November 9th. And that will be three of them to start with the computational law breakout group. That's the challenge proposed by General Electric on basically an algorithmic Magna Carta with a testable with a partner city. That's the challenge, kind of an X prize for law. Automated legal entity with the C4 gang and they'll be exploring actually creating and testing a kind of entirely automated, probably script based software that will create a corporation under United States law and do some business stuff with it, maybe dissolve it at the end, see how that goes. And then continuation of the individual identity and personal data ownership discussion with Elizabeth Reneres and others. So just go ahead and kind of click the ones you're interested in. You can put them in rank order. You can't have two first choices in this case. So kind of select however many you want. Don't select more than you're interested in. And if there's a breakout group you didn't see, you can propose it right here. And let's see how this actually looks. So if we click on one of these, you'll see that we've set up a page for each one. This is the one for automated legal entity. It's in sort of like a virtual table and you can see the leads, the connection information. It'll be live cast. So you can follow along if you're not one of the lucky few to be in the discussion. We can really only recommend four to maybe eight people in the live discussion. But we also are supporting a hack MD document for live edits as opposed to Google Docs. So we're trying something a little new there. And what else can I say about this? Well, I guess the main thing is, as I said, if you see a discussion that you want to continue and that isn't on there, go ahead and nominate it, especially if you're one of the discussion leaders and there's several people that have indicated they want to continue. And even if it's not something that's happening this week, you can go ahead and continue it in a future Thursday and we'll schedule these and kind of stack them in advance. So actually with me now, still at the Media Lab is, hey, Vianna, are you there? Yeah. Look who's here. It's Vianna from Economic Space Agency. Do you think you all might want to continue your home group discussions online when you get back to California? You do? Okay. What was your discussion topic? It was on DIY Composable Smart Contracts. Awesome. Sorry to interrupt you. Thank you for the cameo. All right. So, DIY Composable Smart Contracts with Object Capabilities. Very cool. All right. So if this is of interest to you, go ahead and sign up at mitlegalforum.org. And we'll see you next week with one more update on the conference we had earlier this week when we'll be ready to share all the curated slides and the articles and general electrics challenge, their XPRIZE challenge and make all those links available to everybody and be able to fill you in on a calendar of next steps. So until then, we all wish you a very happy, healthy and hacky weekend from MIT Media Lab. Dazza Greenwood signing off.