Hi, thank you, Scott. As we mentioned on the last call, we held a meeting with the ECFax partners to discuss tactics for accelerating the rollout. The talks were substantive and all partners agreed that an acceleration of the overall program in 2024 would be a mutual goal. In that context, we are actively working on acceleration options and are making progress on the overall plan. While not final, we are encouraged by the direction and anticipate a favorable schedule for next year. Now that said, we have seen the hurdles that can be encountered in a project of this scope and are going to be cautious in forecasting any revenue expected from the program next year. As for the current state of the implementation, we have increased the numbers of facilities using ECFax. And while the pure number of facilities is an improvement, the level of usage per facility varies and not every location has been fully implemented. As we have discussed, there are nearly 30 other government agencies in the pipeline and while progress is being made the threat of a government shutdown earlier this quarter and the upcoming holiday season have slowed the speed of discussions. We do not expect any measurable progress on this front, until sometime in 2024. On the Clarity front, we are in the process of implementing our first Clarity PA client, who signed last July. Clarity PA is a specifically engineered version of Clarity, aimed at the problem of prior authorization workflow. As Scott has mentioned, the slow progress in both closing the deal and implementing the customers are fully on display here. The deal took 15 months to close and will likely require an additional 12 months to implement. In the AI market, this is a typical time frame and is what we can anticipate with each subsequent prospect engagement. Separately, we have launched the Clarity CD product, tuned for Clinical Documentation Administration and build the pipeline of interest. Our sales team is progressing through those opportunities and serious discussions are underway. On the sales front for the quarter, Q3 bookings came in at $6.4 million, which was a welcome improvement from both Q1 and Q2 results. Historically, Q3 has been the best month seasonally for sales and it appears to be holding true this year. While this result is a welcome improvement sequentially, it is still under last year's Q3 result and year-to-date overall 2023 bookings are still lagging 20% behind our 2022 pace. Our advanced product sales came in just short of $1 million and while that was an improvement over Q2, that also still lags behind the 2022 pace. We've also continued our aggressive pursuit of harvesting healthcare accounts from the SoHo base into a more expensive corporate product. For the past several quarters, we have been successfully upgrading more than 1,000 SoHo accounts per quarter, into a corporate product and this quarter is no exception with about 1,300 customers upgraded from SoHo. While each upgrade is a positive increase in revenue, it does come with a negative impact in a couple of key metrics that are important to note. First, these customers tend to be on the extreme low end of our corporate average revenue per account or ARPA range, impacting our overall corporate ARPA with downward pressure. Second, the process for changing an account from SoHo to corporate includes, cancellation of the SoHo account. This process then creates an unfavorable impact on SoHo churn, as our system calculates the cancellation as a churned account. So as you assess our operating metrics, be aware that our upgrade program has those impacts. In the quarter, we were able to close two large hospital system deals, with a combined 60-plus hospitals over 400 clinics and more than 100 skilled nursing facilities. Due to their level of complexity, we anticipate that implementation will take most if not all of 2024. As you will recall from our discussion about the go-to-market realignment earlier this year, we established the e-commerce group for all web-based self-service sales. This group includes our traditional SOHO revenue stream and has been expanded to encompass upmarket sales to the SMB market. This quarter, the SOHO market saw a further moderation of the churn that we saw last year due to our price increase rollout. Churn for the quarter came in just under 3.5%, a nice improvement from last year's Q3 result. Now as mentioned earlier that number includes the 1,300 accounts that we upgraded to Corporate. As we discussed last call, we continue to see the pace of new adds fall under pre-pandemic levels. As we've also said on our last call, the expectation is that this trend will be the new normal in SOHO as we have made the decision to pull back spending in areas of SOHO that we found to have questionable profitability and we'll continue to scrutinize our marketing spend to ensure high returns for the business. This quarter we launched an e-commerce product targeting SMB customers. Traditionally we had used our inside sales team to sell inbound web opportunities and these form-fill customers would be assisted by a live sales rep. The release of this eFax Protect product marks our first entry into the self-service sales approach for corporate. Finally, on the product front as mentioned earlier, we successfully released Clarity CD and we have also successfully completed the Jsign HITRUST audit. Now let me pass the presentation to Jim Malone, our CFO. Jim?