Thank you, Gleb, and good afternoon, everybody. It's hard to believe that it's been 3 months since I joined. But as Gleb noted, we've been pretty busy planning the future. When I first joined, I had 3 major hypothesis about Backblaze. First, Backblaze offered an incredible product with a unique competitive advantage priced at 80% below the traditional cloud service providers. Second, a go-to-market model that needed reinvigoration. And third, a cost structure that can be rightsized to increase operating leverage. So, 3 months into the job, I would say that my original hypothesis still stand and have been further reaffirmed. As Gleb noted, Jason has been leading a transformational change in our go-to-market activities, supported by a product that customers love. On the cost structure side, we did kick off a comprehensive zero-based budgeting exercise. Most companies expect to have automatic year-over-year increases from inflation, vendor price increases and salary raises. Despite those expected cost increases, I'm happy to announce that our year-over-year run rate costs are expected to go down by over $8 million. This is coming from a variety of actions, including a 12% reduction in force that took place this month, an aggressive process of putting all our external spend out to bid and stopping activities that do not align with our future strategy. This allows us to invest some of those savings into revenue-generating sales capacity, which would offset some of the above savings. Let me now turn to the results of the quarter. Q3 revenue was $32.6 million, representing 29% year-over-year growth and in line with the midpoint of our guidance. B2 Cloud Storage revenue was $16.2 million, reflecting a 39% increase over the same period last year. B2 growth was strong, but lower than we would have liked and this was primarily due to churn happening early in the quarter and large deals closing later in the quarter. Computer Backup revenue totaled $16.4 million, reflecting 20% growth, exceeding our expectations due to better-than-expected retention. Net Revenue Retention or NRR, for the total company was 118% compared to 108% last year. The year-over-year improvement mainly benefited from the price increase that we put in place in Q4 2023. The total gross customer retention was 90% in the quarter compared to 91% in the prior year. The high NRR and customer retention demonstrates the strategic importance of our product offerings to our customers. Continuing on to the income statement. Adjusted gross margin was 78%, maintaining the all-time high seen in the last quarter. This is a meaningful increase from the 74% in the same period last year as we continue to build scale. Adjusted EBITDA continues to improve at $3.7 million or 12% of revenue, driven by revenue growth and cost management. This is a very meaningful improvement from minus 3% in the prior year, representing a 1,500 basis points increase. As a broader picture of our P&L and our operating leverage, our variable costs are about 25% of revenue. This includes key components tied to scaling such as hardware spend, data center operating costs and other smaller variable costs. So, as our revenue increases, about 75% should be flowing to the bottom line. This represents great operating leverage. Turning to the balance sheet. Cash, investments and restricted cash totaled $25.6 million at the end of the quarter. I'll take this opportunity to reiterate that we are on track to end the year with at least $20 million. Our cash flow from operations for the past 9 months are $10.3 million, a dramatic improvement from cash use of $10.6 million for the same period last year. This represents a $20.9 million improvement over the prior year. As for free cash flows, we are starting to disclose our adjusted free cash flows in our earnings release and we define it as our operating cash flows less purchases of PP&E, capitalized software costs, principal payments on capital financing leases and non-recurring charges. We are disclosing and emphasizing our adjusted free cash flows because we are laser-focused on being a growth company that is free cash flow positive. Our adjusted free cash flows year-to-date were negative $16 million compared to negative $38 million in the same period last year, showing a dramatic improvement of $22 million. As it relates to cash, we have sufficient liquidity to run the business as we transition to be free cash flow positive. However, of course, we'll always look at opportunities to improve our capital structure. Moving to our guidance. We expect Q4 total revenue to be within the range of $33.5 million to $33.9 million. As a reminder, we lap our price increase in Q4, which helped drive the revenue increases of the past year. For the full year, total revenue is on track to be $127 million to $128 million. We expect Q4 adjusted EBITDA margin to be in the range of 12% to 14%, which excludes the one-time restructuring costs. For the full year, we expect adjusted EBITDA margin to be 9% to 11%. While we'll provide full 2025 guidance in Q1, as usual, I'd like to share some thoughts about 2025. We plan to exit Q4 of 2025 with an adjusted EBITDA margin of approximately 20%, which is about double where we plan to finish this year. And in Q4 of 2025, we expect to be adjusted free cash flow positive. From there on, we expect the operating leverage will kick in to help us grow free cash flows in a healthy way given our low variable cost. Our long-term objective is to be a Rule of 40 company based on revenue growth and adjusted free cash flow margin. In summary, we are excited about the path ahead and the momentum that is already in place. And with that, let's take your questions. Operator?