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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:00,867 --> 00:00:06,200 Hi, everybody and welcome back to this special session of #SeeTheFuture. 2 00:00:06,233 --> 00:00:09,405 I have the great pleasure of introducing our event partners from iThenticate, 3 00:00:09,417 --> 00:00:12,233 research integrity specialists, Yuliya Gorenko and Serhii Tkachenko. 4 00:00:16,067 --> 00:00:17,134 Hi, everyone. 5 00:00:17,167 --> 00:00:19,567 Hi, Yuliya. Serhii, how are you? 6 00:00:19,600 --> 00:00:20,667 - Great. - Hello. 7 00:00:20,700 --> 00:00:21,933 Welcome to #SeeTheFuture. 8 00:00:23,867 --> 00:00:28,134 Yuliya Gorenko is marketing communications specialist at Turnitin, 9 00:00:28,167 --> 00:00:31,033 and is focused on raising awareness around the 10 00:00:31,045 --> 00:00:34,167 importance of integrity in education and research. 11 00:00:34,800 --> 00:00:37,561 She is committed to supporting the researcher community with 12 00:00:37,573 --> 00:00:40,800 practical tools and know-how for ensuring originality of written work. 13 00:00:42,867 --> 00:00:47,000 Serhii Tkachenko is director, product management for iThenticate. 14 00:00:47,033 --> 00:00:49,940 He oversees the development of iThenticate and is the 15 00:00:49,952 --> 00:00:53,033 go-to expert on the latest product updates and insights. 16 00:00:54,867 --> 00:00:57,855 Serhii is dedicated to building technology solutions 17 00:00:57,867 --> 00:01:00,867 that empower researchers to publish with confidence. 18 00:01:01,767 --> 00:01:04,734 In this next session, Yuliya and Serhii will demonstrate the importance 19 00:01:04,746 --> 00:01:07,767 of verifying that your manuscript is free from unintentional plagiarism, 20 00:01:10,067 --> 00:01:13,135 an essential step to getting your research work published 21 00:01:13,147 --> 00:01:16,067 that explore how researchers can leverage iThenticate, 22 00:01:16,367 --> 00:01:21,234 to check what the text similarity and avoid citation errors. 23 00:01:21,267 --> 00:01:25,167 So before we start, let me remind delegates that all questions are welcome. 24 00:01:25,200 --> 00:01:30,167 Please post your questions to Yuliya and Serhii in the Q&A box here. 25 00:01:30,200 --> 00:01:32,107 Any responses will be published in the 26 00:01:32,119 --> 00:01:34,334 official conference reports later this year. 27 00:01:34,367 --> 00:01:37,183 And if you wish to chat to fellow delegates, reach 28 00:01:37,195 --> 00:01:39,967 out to or reach out to the conference organizers. 29 00:01:40,000 --> 00:01:42,988 Please use the chat box below, and please don't forget to 30 00:01:43,000 --> 00:01:46,000 visit our sponsors and exhibitors in the exhibition area. 31 00:01:46,133 --> 00:01:49,324 So without further ado, please let me welcome to #SeeTheFuture 32 00:01:49,336 --> 00:01:52,133 from iThenticate, Yuliya Gorenko and Serhii Tkachenko. 33 00:01:54,567 --> 00:01:56,167 Thank you so much, Tony. 34 00:01:56,200 --> 00:01:59,255 It's a great honor to be here today, and huge 35 00:01:59,267 --> 00:02:02,200 thanks to everyone who is joining us today. 36 00:02:04,100 --> 00:02:07,046 Before we even start, I want to say huge thanks to all of you, to all 37 00:02:07,058 --> 00:02:10,100 researchers out there who change our world for the better with science, 38 00:02:16,167 --> 00:02:19,124 and scientific work and research are the things 39 00:02:19,136 --> 00:02:22,167 that bring humanity forward and help us advance. 40 00:02:24,000 --> 00:02:29,334 So, thank you for your hard work and for your dedication. 41 00:02:29,367 --> 00:02:32,291 Today's event is packed with amazing sessions full of practical tips 42 00:02:32,303 --> 00:02:35,367 and insights, focused on, how can you get your research work published? 43 00:02:40,167 --> 00:02:43,208 We hope you're learning a lot today, and we hope you will 44 00:02:43,220 --> 00:02:46,167 take away helpful information from our session as well. 45 00:02:48,033 --> 00:02:51,300 In this session, we are going to talk about research integrity. 46 00:02:52,833 --> 00:02:55,400 A few words about your today’s speakers. 47 00:02:55,433 --> 00:03:00,567 Tony, thanks for introducing us, just a few more words. 48 00:03:00,600 --> 00:03:02,034 So I represent Turnitin. 49 00:03:02,067 --> 00:03:03,800 My name is Yuliya. 50 00:03:03,833 --> 00:03:06,454 Turnitin is a global company dedicated to 51 00:03:06,466 --> 00:03:09,600 ensuring the integrity of education and research. 52 00:03:09,633 --> 00:03:15,633 Turnitin creates technological solutions to help researchers produce original work. 53 00:03:16,133 --> 00:03:21,067 And, iThenticate is one of the products within the Turnitin family. 54 00:03:21,100 --> 00:03:25,767 And today I'm accompanied by Serhii from iThenticate. 55 00:03:25,800 --> 00:03:28,788 He's the product expert behind iThenticate and he is in charge of 56 00:03:28,800 --> 00:03:31,800 all the innovations that are happening with iThenticate products. 57 00:03:34,800 --> 00:03:40,800 So let's jump into our presentation. 58 00:03:41,200 --> 00:03:44,153 Today, we're going to cover why integrity 59 00:03:44,165 --> 00:03:47,200 is crucial to getting your work published. 60 00:03:48,167 --> 00:03:50,434 We're going to speak about plagiarism. 61 00:03:50,467 --> 00:03:53,487 We're going to define what plagiarism means and 62 00:03:53,499 --> 00:03:56,467 how it might occur, sometimes unintentionally. 63 00:03:57,667 --> 00:04:00,628 And then we're going to speak about how you can ensure 64 00:04:00,640 --> 00:04:03,667 that your manuscript is free from potential plagiarism, 65 00:04:05,000 --> 00:04:08,967 before you submit it to your target journal. 66 00:04:09,000 --> 00:04:11,700 Then we will show you in the very end of our presentation, 67 00:04:11,733 --> 00:04:14,778 we'll show you iThenticate similar to the report that 68 00:04:14,790 --> 00:04:17,733 is available for the Enago community and customers. 69 00:04:21,300 --> 00:04:25,100 So, why integrity, why we're talking about integrity today? 70 00:04:26,700 --> 00:04:29,688 Well, the thing is that integrity of your article, your manuscript is 71 00:04:29,700 --> 00:04:32,700 a very important factor that defines the success of your publication. 72 00:04:38,633 --> 00:04:43,967 Basically, what happens is that when you submit your work to the target journal, 73 00:04:44,000 --> 00:04:47,194 the publisher will actually check your submission for text similarity 74 00:04:47,206 --> 00:04:50,000 to identify whether your work contains potential plagiarism. 75 00:04:55,533 --> 00:04:58,478 And the thing is that if certain text similarities are found in your 76 00:04:58,490 --> 00:05:01,533 submission, your chances of getting rejected are actually much higher. 77 00:05:10,933 --> 00:05:13,896 So that's why it's so important to make sure that your work 78 00:05:13,908 --> 00:05:16,933 is free from citation mistake, is free from text similarity. 79 00:05:19,667 --> 00:05:22,746 And of course, another thing to consider here is that being accused 80 00:05:22,758 --> 00:05:25,667 of plagiarism might actually compromise your reputation, right? 81 00:05:30,367 --> 00:05:33,321 Because if a certain publisher will see the 82 00:05:33,333 --> 00:05:36,367 submission has some ___ plagiarized content, 83 00:05:49,333 --> 00:05:54,000 that the publisher might not be so willing to actually work with you in the future. 84 00:05:55,567 --> 00:05:58,604 The big takeaway here is that it's very important to actually 85 00:05:58,616 --> 00:06:01,567 make sure that your work is free from potential plagiarism, 86 00:06:03,567 --> 00:06:06,167 before you submit it to the target journal. 87 00:06:08,200 --> 00:06:10,234 Well, what is plagiarism? 88 00:06:10,267 --> 00:06:16,267 You might think, you are a diligent, hardworking researcher. 89 00:06:16,933 --> 00:06:19,100 You do original research. 90 00:06:19,133 --> 00:06:24,400 You produce original writing, original articles. 91 00:06:24,433 --> 00:06:26,800 You don't mean to plagiarize. 92 00:06:26,833 --> 00:06:29,300 You never did. You never will. 93 00:06:29,333 --> 00:06:32,300 Why we're even talking about it? 94 00:06:32,333 --> 00:06:38,333 Well, the thing is that plagiarism is not as straightforward as it might seem. 95 00:06:41,167 --> 00:06:44,101 The general notion of plagiarism means basically using 96 00:06:44,113 --> 00:06:47,167 somebody else’s work and presenting it as your own work. 97 00:06:51,833 --> 00:06:54,267 However, it's not that simple. 98 00:06:55,967 --> 00:07:00,800 How plagiarism might occur unintentionally. 99 00:07:00,833 --> 00:07:03,936 Well, today we live in this digital-first environment 100 00:07:03,948 --> 00:07:06,833 where we are bombarded by informational messages, 101 00:07:09,133 --> 00:07:12,121 and sometimes we simply might forget that we're using 102 00:07:12,133 --> 00:07:15,133 a certain source and we just forget about the source. 103 00:07:21,067 --> 00:07:24,239 We just forget to give proper credit to the source, 104 00:07:24,251 --> 00:07:27,067 and this might lead to accidental plagiarism. 105 00:07:33,600 --> 00:07:36,420 Another thing to keep in mind is that sometimes 106 00:07:36,432 --> 00:07:39,500 plagiarism might occur through coauthorship, right? 107 00:07:39,533 --> 00:07:42,598 So, when you're working on an article in collaboration with 108 00:07:42,610 --> 00:07:45,533 other researchers who might be from a different country, 109 00:07:48,000 --> 00:07:50,833 who might have a different background and you 110 00:07:50,845 --> 00:07:54,000 know, you might be very, very attentive to detail. 111 00:07:54,500 --> 00:07:56,334 You might check all your sources. 112 00:07:56,367 --> 00:07:59,194 You might make sure that your citations and 113 00:07:59,206 --> 00:08:02,367 references are properly and perfectly formatted. 114 00:08:02,700 --> 00:08:08,700 However, you cannot be 100% sure that your coauthor will do the same. 115 00:08:09,133 --> 00:08:11,942 That's why it's so important to actually check your co-created 116 00:08:11,954 --> 00:08:15,133 manuscript for text similarity, before you submit it to the publisher. 117 00:08:19,433 --> 00:08:24,500 Because again, at the end of the day, your name is also on this publication. 118 00:08:24,533 --> 00:08:30,533 Your name, might also be compromised if certain plagiarism accusations occur. 119 00:08:35,933 --> 00:08:38,873 One last thing here, as we're talking about plagiarism and we 120 00:08:38,885 --> 00:08:41,933 are recognizing that it might happen unintentionally sometimes. 121 00:08:46,933 --> 00:08:49,888 There are other things that you need to keep 122 00:08:49,900 --> 00:08:52,933 in mind when you are working on your article. 123 00:08:53,100 --> 00:08:56,136 First, is that sometimes just the incorrect formatting of your 124 00:08:56,148 --> 00:08:59,100 citation might be considered as plagiarism by the publisher. 125 00:09:06,733 --> 00:09:09,632 So you need to always make sure that you provide 126 00:09:09,644 --> 00:09:12,733 proper and complete information about your sources. 127 00:09:14,733 --> 00:09:17,361 And then one last thing here, which is very 128 00:09:17,373 --> 00:09:20,733 interesting and very controversial, is self-plagiarism. 129 00:09:21,933 --> 00:09:26,600 And you might think, Oh, well, how is it even possible, right? 130 00:09:26,633 --> 00:09:32,600 What is wrong with using your own work again? 131 00:09:32,633 --> 00:09:35,711 Well, the thing is that there is a certain practice when researchers 132 00:09:35,723 --> 00:09:38,633 are trying to submit their own work as a new work several times, 133 00:09:49,600 --> 00:09:52,967 just to increase the amount of their publication. 134 00:09:53,000 --> 00:09:59,000 And this might not be the most ethical thing to do. 135 00:09:59,067 --> 00:10:02,055 Basically, the main thing to keep in mind here would be, it's okay to 136 00:10:02,067 --> 00:10:05,067 refer to your previous publications, it's okay to cite your own work. 137 00:10:09,567 --> 00:10:12,616 But you have to do it properly and you have to actually be transparent and 138 00:10:12,628 --> 00:10:15,567 indicate that you are quoting to referencing your previous publication. 139 00:10:23,133 --> 00:10:26,020 So again, when you are working on your new manuscript, you need to make 140 00:10:26,032 --> 00:10:29,133 sure that you are citing all your sources properly, including your own work. 141 00:10:39,433 --> 00:10:43,867 So here, we are moving to the second part of our presentation, 142 00:10:43,900 --> 00:10:46,837 as we all now understand how integrity and originality of 143 00:10:46,849 --> 00:10:49,900 your work is important for the success of your publication. 144 00:10:54,533 --> 00:10:57,471 We're moving to the second part of this presentation where 145 00:10:57,483 --> 00:11:00,533 we are going to speak about a solution that researchers use, 146 00:11:01,700 --> 00:11:07,167 to ensure that their content is free from potential plagiarism. 147 00:11:07,200 --> 00:11:11,767 And here, we're very proud to speak about our partnership with Enago. 148 00:11:11,800 --> 00:11:17,633 It's a strategic partnership between Enago and iThenticate since 2016. 149 00:11:19,567 --> 00:11:24,734 Basically, there is a huge synergy between our companies, between our brands, 150 00:11:24,767 --> 00:11:27,755 because Enago is a company committed to supporting the researcher 151 00:11:27,767 --> 00:11:30,767 community to helping researchers in getting their work published. 152 00:11:36,167 --> 00:11:39,241 And iThenticate is one of the tools that researchers can use to publish 153 00:11:39,253 --> 00:11:42,167 with confidence, to ensure that their work is free from plagiarism. 154 00:11:47,867 --> 00:11:50,728 Basically, when you are working with Enago, when you're using Enago 155 00:11:50,740 --> 00:11:53,867 services, you can also select the plagiarism check and service via Enago. 156 00:12:01,133 --> 00:12:04,321 And Enago team will use iThenticate to actually 157 00:12:04,333 --> 00:12:07,133 scan your submission for text similarity. 158 00:12:10,200 --> 00:12:15,334 It's a very straightforward, very simple and very quick process. 159 00:12:15,367 --> 00:12:19,767 And as an outcome, you will get a PDF report, 160 00:12:19,800 --> 00:12:22,653 where areas of potential plagiarism where areas with 161 00:12:22,665 --> 00:12:25,800 text similarity will be very clearly highlighted for you, 162 00:12:29,800 --> 00:12:32,926 and you will be able to take appropriate action on these 163 00:12:32,938 --> 00:12:35,800 areas that require some review and additional work. 164 00:12:40,333 --> 00:12:42,534 So, here is how iThenticate looks. 165 00:12:42,567 --> 00:12:48,567 It's very, very straightforward, very simple, but very powerful tool, 166 00:12:49,567 --> 00:12:52,601 which identifies and highlights the similarities in your work and 167 00:12:52,613 --> 00:12:55,567 provides you information about each source that is highlighted. 168 00:13:00,233 --> 00:13:03,344 So how it actually works, iThenticate is powered by a huge content database 169 00:13:03,356 --> 00:13:06,233 and iThenticate compares your submission to premium academic content, 170 00:13:18,400 --> 00:13:21,388 which includes premium scholarly journals, books, patents, 171 00:13:21,400 --> 00:13:24,400 conference proceedings and a huge database of web content. 172 00:13:32,200 --> 00:13:35,367 So, when you submit to your work, iThenticate compares it to literally 173 00:13:35,379 --> 00:13:38,200 everything that's ever been created and written in your niche, 174 00:13:44,933 --> 00:13:47,871 so you can make sure that if there is any text similarity, 175 00:13:47,883 --> 00:13:50,933 it will be always identified and highlighted by iThenticate. 176 00:13:56,267 --> 00:13:59,407 We are very proud to speak about the top publishers 177 00:13:59,419 --> 00:14:02,267 that are actually partnering with iThenticate. 178 00:14:06,067 --> 00:14:09,318 That's what makes the iThenticate content database absolutely 179 00:14:09,330 --> 00:14:12,067 unique and makes it so helpful for the researchers, 180 00:14:15,600 --> 00:14:18,520 because researchers can make sure that the publications from the 181 00:14:18,532 --> 00:14:21,600 top scientific publishers are included in the iThenticate database. 182 00:14:27,167 --> 00:14:29,947 And another thing to keep in mind here is that 183 00:14:29,959 --> 00:14:33,167 through these partnerships with these top publishers, 184 00:14:37,167 --> 00:14:40,210 these publishers actually, most of them, would also use 185 00:14:40,222 --> 00:14:43,167 iThenticate to check your work or check similarities. 186 00:14:44,867 --> 00:14:47,833 So when you submit your article to a certain publisher, it's very, 187 00:14:47,845 --> 00:14:50,867 very likely that they're also using iThenticate to check your work. 188 00:14:54,000 --> 00:15:00,000 So if you just use it before you submit the article to the publisher, 189 00:15:00,333 --> 00:15:03,291 you can make sure that the publisher will accept 190 00:15:03,303 --> 00:15:06,333 your work as it's already checked by iThenticate. 191 00:15:13,667 --> 00:15:16,901 And one last thing here from me is that iThenticate is constantly 192 00:15:16,913 --> 00:15:19,667 working on actually increasing our database of content. 193 00:15:23,000 --> 00:15:26,261 And we are working on getting the latest publications 194 00:15:26,273 --> 00:15:29,000 from all subjects or disciplines, all areas. 195 00:15:32,933 --> 00:15:35,921 So, you know, if you are working on a research in 196 00:15:35,933 --> 00:15:38,933 a certain niche, you can be confident that again, 197 00:15:41,267 --> 00:15:44,313 your work will be compared to all other publications 198 00:15:44,325 --> 00:15:47,267 that already exist in your particular disciplines. 199 00:15:51,067 --> 00:15:56,067 So that's probably everything that I wanted to share today. 200 00:15:56,100 --> 00:15:59,000 And now I'm going to pass it over to Serhii, 201 00:15:59,033 --> 00:16:01,858 who will tell you a bit more about how iThenticate looks and 202 00:16:01,870 --> 00:16:05,033 works, and maybe he will share some product insights with us today. 203 00:16:09,733 --> 00:16:10,934 Yeah. 204 00:16:10,967 --> 00:16:12,034 Thank you, Yuliya. 205 00:16:12,067 --> 00:16:15,434 Thank you everyone for joining our session. 206 00:16:15,467 --> 00:16:18,407 Yeah, iThenticate report is not something like rocket that we 207 00:16:18,419 --> 00:16:21,467 are going to send to the Mars, but it's really straightforward. 208 00:16:25,967 --> 00:16:28,979 And the main goal of our Similarity Report when we check every 209 00:16:28,991 --> 00:16:31,967 manuscript and every paper across billions of internet pages, 210 00:16:37,167 --> 00:16:40,386 articles, manuscript dissertations, we represent 211 00:16:40,398 --> 00:16:43,167 and present results in Similarity Report, 212 00:16:47,433 --> 00:16:50,330 where our authors really could check all of the 213 00:16:50,342 --> 00:16:53,433 matches, all of the sources, easily identify them, 214 00:16:59,333 --> 00:17:02,094 check them and our main goal to actually provide ease of use 215 00:17:02,106 --> 00:17:05,333 interface to do it and highlight all the matches and show the results. 216 00:17:15,200 --> 00:17:19,900 For the last year, we are working hard on new version of iThenticate. 217 00:17:21,433 --> 00:17:24,554 We are working towards one goal and actually we do support 218 00:17:24,566 --> 00:17:27,433 the Enago’s vision, author’s first and quality first. 219 00:17:33,067 --> 00:17:35,994 That's why we are working on a syndicate to remove false positives, and 220 00:17:36,006 --> 00:17:39,067 we're working towards detecting and excluding citations, different styles. 221 00:17:46,933 --> 00:17:51,034 Right now, we support ___ styles. 222 00:17:51,067 --> 00:17:54,055 And as well, we are working to exclude and detect preprint 223 00:17:54,067 --> 00:17:57,067 sources to remove them as well from the Similarity Report. 224 00:18:02,633 --> 00:18:05,695 And for example, also, we received a lot of feedback from our 225 00:18:05,707 --> 00:18:08,633 authors about excluding also some sections of manuscripts, 226 00:18:14,333 --> 00:18:17,594 because they don't want to check them for potential similarities, 227 00:18:17,606 --> 00:18:20,333 potential ___ and they want to remove false positives. 228 00:18:23,633 --> 00:18:26,593 And our goal is to show in Similarity Report only the 229 00:18:26,605 --> 00:18:29,633 matches and items as it should be reviewed by authors. 230 00:18:37,400 --> 00:18:42,500 We want to save time of our researchers on reviewing these results, 231 00:18:42,533 --> 00:18:45,564 and keep only critical items that should be reviewed and remove all of 232 00:18:45,576 --> 00:18:48,533 the noise or and then like some common matches in Similarity Report, 233 00:18:58,233 --> 00:19:01,014 and make it clear and understandable from a couple of 234 00:19:01,026 --> 00:19:04,233 minutes spending on reviewing the result of similarity check. 235 00:19:16,567 --> 00:19:19,067 Yeah, thank you. 236 00:19:19,100 --> 00:19:20,200 All right. 237 00:19:20,233 --> 00:19:25,200 So, I think that's almost everything that we wanted to share with you today. 238 00:19:25,233 --> 00:19:28,155 I hope that you basically you understood how the integrity of your 239 00:19:28,167 --> 00:19:31,233 research actually impacts the success of your particular publication, 240 00:19:36,633 --> 00:19:42,633 and the success of your future career and how it affects your reputation. 241 00:19:44,000 --> 00:19:46,895 So I would say the biggest takeaway here is we 242 00:19:46,907 --> 00:19:50,000 recommend everyone to always be on the safe side. 243 00:19:52,833 --> 00:19:58,267 And if you are 100% confident that you are writing original work, 244 00:19:58,300 --> 00:20:01,191 it is still important to make sure that you run a pre-check 245 00:20:01,203 --> 00:20:04,300 before you submit it to the publisher to avoid any frustration, 246 00:20:08,100 --> 00:20:13,134 and increase the chances of your work getting published. 247 00:20:13,167 --> 00:20:16,186 So one last thing here is that maybe some of you 248 00:20:16,198 --> 00:20:19,167 are actually already familiar with iThenticate, 249 00:20:22,633 --> 00:20:28,633 or maybe you are only planning to start using it with Enago. 250 00:20:28,867 --> 00:20:31,831 So we're sharing our contact information here on this slide, 251 00:20:31,843 --> 00:20:34,867 and we encourage you to actually share your feedback with us. 252 00:20:38,700 --> 00:20:41,615 If you have anything you want to share with us, good story, 253 00:20:41,627 --> 00:20:44,700 bad story, suggestions, questions, you are very, very welcome. 254 00:20:49,567 --> 00:20:55,434 And we would love to share your stories with the broader researcher community. 255 00:20:55,467 --> 00:20:59,534 So well, that's it from us for today. 256 00:20:59,567 --> 00:21:02,291 Thank you so much Enago for having us and 257 00:21:02,303 --> 00:21:05,300 thanks for everybody who is joining us today. 258 00:21:05,333 --> 00:21:08,467 It's a great honor and a great pleasure to be here. 259 00:21:08,500 --> 00:21:10,726 Thank you very much, Yuliya, and thank you very much, 260 00:21:10,738 --> 00:21:12,934 Serhii, your presentation was extremely informative. 261 00:21:12,967 --> 00:21:15,932 I'm sure many of our audience are already using iThenticate and 262 00:21:15,944 --> 00:21:18,967 it has helped them in the preparation of their research content. 263 00:21:21,067 --> 00:21:23,498 But equally, there are lots of researchers here 264 00:21:23,510 --> 00:21:25,800 who are preparing papers for the first time. 265 00:21:25,833 --> 00:21:28,205 I'm sure they’ll find knowing about how they 266 00:21:28,217 --> 00:21:30,600 can access the service is very, very useful. 267 00:21:30,633 --> 00:21:35,100 Can I remind delegates that if you have any questions to Serhii and for Yuliya, 268 00:21:35,133 --> 00:21:38,246 as well as contacting them directly on the details you've just been shown, 269 00:21:38,258 --> 00:21:41,133 please feel free to send your questions in the Q&A box on this page. 270 00:21:43,867 --> 00:21:46,588 And we will publish the responses in the 271 00:21:46,600 --> 00:21:49,534 official conference report later this year. 272 00:21:49,567 --> 00:21:53,500 Again, can I remind delegates to visit the sponsors and exhibitors at their booths, 273 00:21:53,533 --> 00:21:55,982 and please come back to the next session of 274 00:21:55,994 --> 00:21:58,567 #SeeTheFuture which will be starting shortly. 275 00:21:58,600 --> 00:21:59,867 Thanks, guys. See you soon. 276 00:21:59,867 --> 00:21:59,907 AB this is a cow 277 00:22:09,907 --> 00:23:59,907 this is a cow 25122

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