Hi folks, this is Ed Amoroso. And I want to talk to you a little more about security awareness and security awareness video in particular. Now when you're trying to convince a group to do something in our modern time, there's a few ways that I think we've all seen work. Number one, social works, viral works, humor works and clearly video works. Those old sort of emails that you might get at work, a stern sort of video saying, to all staff, do the following. Nobody reads that stuff anymore. In fact, the younger people in particular will hit the delete button on anything that looks like it requires a lot of reading and a lot of instruction that needs to be followed. But if that's replaced with something interesting like a fun viral video that gets your message across, and in this context, a message around security awareness. Like for example, being careful what you click on, being careful what you download, being careful what you save. You shouldn't be saving a bunch of real important stuff that maybe could be put off onto a cloud server. Or being careful what you share, like what you say, what you're doing. You might be in an airplane and you're blabbing too much about corporate secrets, we've all seen that happen. So these basic security awareness messages for the most part, I think in a modern context, are best accomplished using video. Now there's some wonderful companies doing this. A lot of good examples that you might find on the Internet. But my good friends from Ataata have created content that I think is just wonderful, and they were kind enough to share some examples here. We're going to see a little video clip here that I think you're going to enjoy it. It's a great, great illustration of how video can be used to accomplish wonderful cyber security objectives. Let's take a look.