 The fact that information spreads quickly means that truth can spread quickly and lies can spread quickly and Wikipedia I think really tries to be that that place you go when you've got a moment to reflect to say okay I actually need to learn about this. Wikipedia is a crowdsourced encyclopedia. You don't have to buy it and anyone can edit it. So you have to have your sources and you have to have your citations so there's always a way to back up the the information so it's not just out there recklessly or irresponsibly there's always something you know backing it up so that you can always start back from the original source. Working with Wikipedia is not only about writing articles but to understand the whole system of knowledge production. What's our place in the Knowledge Society. We came down and we'll leave it on the side and that's the challenge. There's no challenge with us. The challenge is that we enter quickly or we enter quickly with any direction. We know from the technologies that are on Wikipedia's website the world's most famous. I'm from Ukraine. I'm from Ghana. I'm from Argentina. I'm from Moscow, Russia. I come from Egypt. Hong Kong, Israel, Berlin, South India. Ramallah, Palestine. We are fundamentally community driven and this is very different from any other top website and it matters. Whatever you might think of Wikipedia, whatever problems Wikipedia has, of course we have problems. Nobody ever sits around and says, yeah well they're beholden to their advertisers. Our community has a very high degree of intellectual independence. No one can come to us and try to lean on us to put false information in Wikipedia or to hide some true information that they don't like because frankly the money comes from the general public and that means we're beholden to the general public. In 100 years when people look back on this era, these decades around the first of this century, they're going to point at Wikipedia as one of the things that was really good.