Thank you, Cameron. Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for joining us on the call today. Today, I will walk through our 2024 results, highlight key milestones from a transformational year, and provide insight into the strategic direction of Bit Digital, Inc. as we scale our HPC operations. 2024 was a fantastic year for Bit Digital, Inc. Revenues grew exponentially by 141%, margins expanded, and adjusted EBITDA reached $73 million. This was driven by the rapid growth of our HPC business, which started in 2024 with one customer, and by early January of this year, we surpassed 20 customers. HPC revenue made up over 40% of full-year revenue and more than half of Q4 revenue. The Enovum acquisition was a major leap forward. This acquisition vertically integrated our data center operation, added a strong customer base, and brought in a highly experienced team. This team gives us a huge advantage in scaling our infrastructure business. We also built out our organization. Headcount has been focused on hiring seasoned value creators, all focused either on data center operations or cloud services. These are businesses you cannot just throw capital at; you need the right talent. We now have specialized teams leading both divisions. We have a lot to cover today. I will walk through each part of the business, and Erke will then walk you through the financials before we open the line for questions. First, let's start with our cloud services business. As we scale our AI infrastructure, we recently launched WhiteFiber, our new HPC platform that integrates GPU cloud services and data center operations. As part of this evolution, we have updated our segment reporting to better reflect our business structure. What was previously referred to as high-performance computing services is now categorized under HPC, the umbrella term for our entire WhiteFiber business. Cloud services represent our GPU cloud platform, while colocation services include our data center business from Enovum. Cloud services did not exist in 2023, and it became our largest business in terms of revenue generation by the second half of 2024, producing $13 million of revenue in the fourth quarter of 2024. This segment contributed 50% of total revenue in Q4 and 64% of gross profit. Gross profits contracted slightly in Q4 as we added new GPUs and leased additional data center capacity ahead of revenue generation. We viewed this as temporary; we expect margins to normalize over time. A key factor was GPU leasing expenses, particularly the H100 sale-leaseback from early 2024, which accounted for 70% of the cost of revenue for that segment. That was a unique structure reflecting our risk tolerance at that time. Going forward, as we own more GPUs outright or deploy more traditional financing structures, we expect margins to expand. We currently have nine active customers in our cloud segments of WhiteFiber. The majority are running single-digit servers with annualized revenue or ARR below $1 million, but most were won in the past few months. This aligns with our strategy of onboarding customers and scaling deployments over time. We are happy to start with smaller initial deployments to earn trust, demonstrate performance, and expand contract sizes after relationships grow. Our cloud services run rate is approximately $72 million later this month when the H200 contract with DNA Fund begins generating revenue. Revenue generation on the contract was pushed out by a month as we ensured full reliability before going live, a decision made deliberately to prioritize customer experience and long-term satisfaction. Additionally, we have $15 million in ARR expected to start at the end of June when we deploy 512 B200 GPUs for our anchor customer. Separately, we received our first 512 D200 GPUs, which are being deployed in Iceland. We expect this cluster to go live in April and plan to offer these GPUs through an on-demand pool via a third-party platform. This would be an interim step as we work internally on developing our own on-demand platform. While we see strong demand for reserved B200 contracts, we believe on-demand deployment effectively pulls forward revenue and shortens payback periods. Based on current market dynamics, this cluster could generate approximately $25 million in additional ARR. We also have about 113 H200 servers or 908 GPUs currently being configured, and we are evaluating reserve contract options for those units. Illustratively, at $2 per hour, that is another $16 million in ARR once contracted. Overall, our customer pipeline remains strong and dynamic. Demand for B200s is surging. Also, since Deep Seek, we have seen renewed enthusiasm for H100s and H200s because one can do more with less. We are consistently engaging new prospective customers, and demand continues to outstrip supply. While we see significant growth opportunities, we are taking a disciplined approach to GPU procurement, carefully managing capital deployment to avoid excess inventory risk. Our focus is on growing at a pace that aligns with customer trust, ensuring that as relationships deepen, we scale deployments accordingly. We have also invested in top-tier technical talent to build a robust software-driven infrastructure that enhances performance, reliability, and scalability. Customers do not just need access to GPUs; they need a trusted high-performance platform that ensures seamless deployment and maximal performance. Our investments in this technology layer to deliver just that is a key differentiator, helping us drive customer trust, retention, and long-term growth. Also, with Boosteroid, the third-largest cloud gaming provider in the world, we continue to expand our partnership. Currently, we have just under 500 GPUs contracted, representing approximately $1.6 million in annual revenue over the five-year term. We are in the process of finalizing an agreement to deploy an additional 700 GPUs, which, if completed, would generate an additional $2.4 million in annual revenue for Boosteroid. We expect the deployment cadence to accelerate throughout 2025. Our GPU procurement strategy is a balancing act between growth and risk. We are focused on scaling customer deployments and expanding GPU capacity to meet growing demand. Several live opportunities are substantial, with contracts representing nine-figure annual revenue and three to four-year locked-up terms. Executing these would require the right financing structures, and we are actively evaluating lease financing and other capital-efficient options. We are firmly in the mix for blue-chip deals. As our AI compute grows, our focus remains on execution, efficiency, and customer relationships. WhiteFiber is scaling rapidly, and we believe we are well-positioned to be a leader in AI infrastructure. Turning to our colocation services segment of WhiteFiber, this business was established with our acquisition of Enovum in October 2024, marking a major step in our evolution as an HPC platform. Before the acquisition, we had no colocation business. Now we operate a tier-three data center with a full roster of clients, which currently stands at 14 active customers. We added a recurring revenue stream and expanded our expertise. Beyond its immediate contribution, Enovum provides a scalable foundation for future growth, backed by an experienced team and a very robust development pipeline. The Enovum acquisition is a gift that keeps on giving. Since closing the acquisition, we have moved quickly to expand our colocation capacity and secure strategic customer agreements. In Q4, we acquired Montreal 2, a 160,000-square-foot industrial site in Montreal for approximately $23 million as part of our plan to expand to 32 megawatts by 2025. Montreal 2 is being developed into a 5-megawatt tier-three data center expected to go live in mid-2025. The facility will be powered by 100% renewable hydroelectricity and will feature direct-to-chip liquid cooling. This site provides key advantages in accelerating our development pipeline. The property was well-suited for a retrofit and includes transferable HVAC infrastructure, allowing us to reduce costs and bring capacity online faster. A core tenant of our growth strategy. We still expect to complete the retrofit for approximately $19 million. We are also in the process of securing cost-effective mortgage financing to support the build-out in a non-dilutive manner. We plan on announcing the customer for Montreal 2 at a later date. In February, we announced a multi-year colocation agreement with a leading AI hardware innovator. This client is Cerebras, the manufacturer of the fastest inference LLM processor in the world. Cerebras is launching six new data center sites in North America and chose us to be their partner for their first-ever Canadian data center. This agreement is a major validation of our colocation strategy, reinforcing our ability to provide high-performance build-to-suit infrastructure for industry leaders. Under this contract, we will provide 5 megawatts of customized high-density colocation capacity over a five-year term. The location for the development has been selected, and we are in the process of finalizing legal ownership of the site. Once that process is complete, we will formally announce the location. We expect the contract to commence in mid-2025. Cerebras is pioneering wafer-scale technology, which enables ultra-fast AI infrastructure for some of the largest and most complex AI workloads in the world. Their deployment with us would be the first of its kind in Canada, expanding AI compute access to enterprises, research institutions, and government entities. This deployment required a highly customized high-density solution, validating our ability to design infrastructure for next-generation AI workflows with very unique technical requirements. Beyond this initial deployment, we see significant potential for future expansion as Cerebras continues to scale its infrastructure. Their rapid growth reflects the increasing demand for high-density AI-optimized colocation. Our ability to meet their highly specialized requirements underscores the strength and adaptability of our platform. We are super excited to support them in their next phase of development. As mentioned, we are deep in the mix for blue-chip deals, and that's a prime example of one. Stay tuned for more. Beyond Montreal 2, our development pipeline has expanded significantly, now totaling 510 megawatts, including 156 megawatts under exclusive LOI. This includes sites in both Canada and the US, with six locations under exclusive LOI ranging from 8 megawatts to 100 megawatts. The major driver for the pipeline expansion was the addition of locations in the United States. We recently brought a US site under LOI that could redefine our data center platform. If developed, it could be our largest project to date, significantly expanding our scale and market position. Even with our planned capacity expansions, we continue to receive more customer demand than we can currently accommodate. This underscores the urgent need for additional high-performance data center space and reinforces our approach of prioritizing execution speed and customer alignment. Everyone knows about the current tariff wars that are playing out. We are currently monitoring and assessing their potential impact on our data centers' build-out. Many critical components, such as generators, HVAC systems, and electrical infrastructure, are imported from the United States, Canada, and Mexico, and new tariffs could increase build costs. We are evaluating strategies to mitigate potential increases, including diversifying supply chains and optimizing procurement. While monitoring if, how, and when these tariff policies may take place. Looking ahead, we believe inference will be the largest driver for long-term AI compute demand, and we are positioning our data centers to capture this shift. Strategically, we are developing in metropolitan areas where we expect the broadest customer appeal over time. This ensures we can meet the needs of enterprise, government, and research institutions seeking low-latency, high-performance AI infrastructure. Turning to our Bitcoin mining business, we remain focused on maintaining a cost-efficient and optimized fleet rather than growing hash rate for the sake of expansion. Mining accounted for 54% of revenue in 2024, down from 98% in 2023 as we prioritize investments in HPC. That said, mining remains an important part of our business, and we are taking targeted steps to improve efficiency and reduce costs. Our active mining fleet is currently around 1.6 exahash with an efficiency of approximately 25 to 26 joules per terahash. We have now fully exited all claimant facilities and are refreshing our fleet with more efficient miners at new hosting sites. To replace lost deployment capacity, we secured 30 megawatts of new hosting, 19 megawatts with Core Scientific, and 11 megawatts with Luna. The 11-megawatt site was filled with 1,800 redeployed K-Pros and about 1,400 S21s and S21+ units. The 19-megawatt site will support some redeployed assets as well as 3,800 S21+ miners, adding 820 petahash to our fleet. To date, we have deployed 941 S21 miners and 500 S21+ units, improving overall fleet efficiency. These upgrades are expected to bring our operational hash rate to approximately 2.5 exahash by May, with pro forma efficiency to around 22 joules per terahash. Reaching 3 exahash would require securing an additional 6.6 megawatts of hosting and acquiring approximately 1,800 more S21+ miners. The power is available from multiple sources, and we are actively evaluating the best path forward. Our strategy remains unchanged. We are not allocating significant growth capital to mining. Instead, we are structuring the business to maintain Bitcoin exposure in a capital-efficient way, focusing on fleet optimization and cost reductions while keeping a disciplined approach to capital deployment. Mining remains a part of our portfolio, but our investment priority remains on scaling our HPC business. I will now hand over the line to Erke, who will discuss our financial results. Thank you, Sam.