Thank you, Lauren, and thanks to all of you for joining us today. I'm going to dive right in to our quarterly performance. There was a lot to like about our Q1 performance and I'll share some of the highlights. But there were also some things we didn't like and I'll talk about those areas also, and importantly, what we're doing to improve our performance for the future. Q1, again, exceeded guidance across all metrics. Total revenue grew 19% and Subscription revenue was up 20%. Marketplace & Other grew 18%, driven by our Data Marketplace business, which was up 29% in the quarter. We ended the quarter with $409 million in ARR, up 20% compared to the same period last year. On the new business front, we would have liked to report stronger net adds which came in at only 5 for the quarter. New business in the US is simply not where I would like it to be. During the past quarter, we put a real emphasis on building earlier stage pipeline, onboarding additional sales reps and developing our partner and cloud channels, but these activities are inherently longer lead time initiatives. While disappointed in volumes, we remain very encouraged by the quality of new customers we are adding. For example, in the quarter, we continued to see particular strength in our large enterprise customer segment as a result of increased adoption of our enterprise data enablement platform, Safe Haven. Our $0.5 million to $1 million customer count was up 28%, and our $1 million-plus customer count grew to 90, an increase of roughly 30% compared to the prior year. In the quarter, we signed a notable new deal with a major automotive manufacturer to help support the launch of its new global vehicle services and distribution business. This new customer is using LiveRamp to leverage its first-party data for customer acquisition and expand the reach of its B2C audiences to B2B. This deal was sourced through our partnership with Google Cloud Platform, or GCP, and is a great example of how customers are increasingly leveraging LiveRamp inside of their cloud environments. Turning from new business to expansion of existing customers, we saw continued solid growth from existing customers in Q1. Subscription usage as a percentage of total Subscription business was roughly 12%, slightly ahead of our expectations. Subscription net retention came in at 113%, and platform net retention was also 113%. During the quarter, we signed a seven-figure expansion deal with a large American retailer to help enable the growth of its retail media business. This retailer is using the Safe Haven data enablement platform to both power audience profiling and targeting, and also to enable collaborative analytics with its partners. Another expansion deal in the quarter was with a longtime LiveRamp data activation customer in the travel sector as they pursue their digital transformation and build out their data infrastructure. This customer is leveraging LiveRamp to provide foundational identity inside of their CDP and cloud data warehouse to power both their paid media channels but also notably their internal customer experience applications, things like their call center, email services providers and site personalization tools. While the quarter itself was solid, looking ahead, our caution has grown. Our pipeline remains stable and is actually even growing. However, recessionary concerns have certainly entered into customer conversations across certain industries and customer types, notably our midmarket customers, we are seeing a lengthening of deal cycles and pressure on conversion rates. There is no question that companies are being more deliberate about their investments right now. Given what we are seeing, we are tempering our second half Subscription bookings outlook. As you would expect, we're already taking action to accelerate our performance, which I'll talk about in more detail momentarily. Related to the more variable components of the business, namely Subscription usage and Marketplace, we are monitoring activity very closely. We are not yet seeing a material pullback in data-enabled advertising spend. Subscription usage and Data Marketplace activity were healthy in Q1 and our mid-period reporting suggests another solid performance in Q2. That said, it is hard to ignore the recent trends that media peers and other industry experts have cited, suggesting a softening of the advertising spend in the back half of this year. Warren will discuss these dynamics in more detail during his section, but for the reasons mentioned, we are reducing our guidance to incorporate these market factors into our outlook for the balance of the year. While the macro environment has become more challenging, our long-term opportunity remains unchanged, and I am confident in our ability to manage and win through uncertain times. I'll repeat a point I've made before. The technology we provide is mission-critical to our customers' data strategies. Digital transformation continues to be a top initiative for most major enterprises, and our platform is a key investment priority for companies that are focused on using data to deliver better customer experiences and competitive advantage. We have also adjusted and executed through uncertainty before, and we will surely draw on the lessons we've learned. During the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, for example, we prioritized positioning use cases that better resonated in a more challenging macro environment, like addressable television and collaborative measurement, and we adjusted our sales playbooks and selling motions accordingly. We also quickly identified cost-containment initiatives that allowed us to protect our bottom line while still delivering innovation to customers. And perhaps a final and important reason for my long-term confidence is that we have clear line of sight areas we believe will improve our top line growth, profitability and return on shareholder capital, which brings me to the next topic I'd like to discuss today. On our last call, we highlighted a few areas of the business with untapped potential. Let me now provide a brief update on each. Opportunity number one, accelerate growth. We're entering into a likely recession, which implies caution in our short-term guidance. Despite that, I think there are opportunities to accelerate long-term growth, which we intend to accomplish by prioritizing three key initiatives: first, expanding our sales and marketing capacity; second, expanding to new geographies; and third, accelerating our partner channel efforts. Initiative number one, unlocking greater sales capacity and productivity. As discussed in May, a top organizational priority this year is to expand our sales capacity and drive greater accountability and productivity. We aggressively hired enterprise sellers in the first quarter, adding over 20 new quota-bearing head count. We also remained focused on ensuring our sellers are well-trained in enterprise selling and have implemented several initiatives to drive greater levels of productivity. For example, in Q1, we rolled out an enterprise sales training academy to our entire commercial team with the goal of enhancing our sellers' enterprise sales skills and helping them manage more complex deal cycles that involve more stakeholders across the enterprise. In Q1, we also piloted a new onboarding program for new commercial hires with the goal of reducing the ramp time from six to four months. We are seeing early signals that these programs are working, for example, reps signing deals in their first quarter at LiveRamp. And while these initiatives will take time to bear fruit given a potential looming recession, we believe that continued investments and selling capacity will fuel stronger long term growth. A second growth initiative this year is to drive continued ATS adoption amongst publishers and marketers and accelerate our international expansion. ATS has emerged as the global standard for addressability in a post cookie and device ID world. In fact, Sincera, a new verification service, recently found that RampID had the largest active cookie-less footprint of all IDs in the markets, with a 70% absorption of its ID into the mainstream, meaning IDs that are both deployed on publishers and actionable for advertisers. This is due in large measure to our growing partnerships with the world's largest publishers, 1,500 in total, representing more than 11,500 publisher domains. ATS is a key source of competitive differentiation for LiveRamp in both the US, and importantly, international markets as today we are the only identity solution with global scale. This is reflected in our recent international momentum. In the quarter, International bookings were up 40% and revenue was up nearly 40%, with key deals being signed in China, Australia, Germany and the UK. Last week, Google announced that it was postponing its time line for deprecation of third-party chrome cookies to mid-2024. Let me address what this means for LiveRamp. LiveRamp is ready for the cookie-less future today. However, we will continue to support cookie-based workflows as long as they exist. So any impact, positive or negative, associated with Google's delay is minimal. Where we do see an impact is confusion in the market, both in the industry and with shareholders. And we intend to further increase the amount of case studies and education that we provide to the entire ecosystem, so that our position as the essential industry standard becomes even more apparent. For those clients who want to continue to use cookies, we'll support them. For those that recognize that better performance can be unlocked with authenticated identifiers, we provide the greatest reach and best performance. We work with over 400 industry identifiers today. And in a world with or without cookies, we are uniquely embraced as the ubiquitous standard that connects virtually everyone and everything in the industry. A final growth initiative this year is to expand our partner channel strategy with a focus on broadening our cloud partnerships. In recent months, the topic of competition from cloud providers has come up more frequently. So let me address this misconception head-on. Our strategy is to enable not to compete with the clouds and to partner closely to serve the market together. We remain committed to delivering our technology wherever our customers' data lives and have deployed key products in the cloud solutions our customers increasingly depend on for their critical data workloads. We are enabling customers to achieve faster returns on their cloud investments, reduce data fragmentation, and more easily leverage identity in the cloud. Today, we are live in GCP, AWS and internationally in the JD Cloud, allowing their customers to deploy LiveRamp's identity and addressability solutions with the click of a button. And by the end of the quarter, we expect our addressability solutions to be live in Azure to help publishers better monetize inventory in a cookie-less world. In addition, we are continuing to strengthen our partnership with Snowflake to provide core identity resolution and identity translation solutions that will be foundational for customers to use for segmentation, activation, collaboration and measurement. We are not competing for storage and compute, nor do we believe our cloud partners are interested in building their own identity graphs and broad data connectivity capabilities. So ensuring we create enduring and symbiotic partnerships will be a longer term growth driver for us. Opportunity number two, improving operating profit and cash flow. Q1 represented our ninth consecutive quarter of profitability and our track record here is very strong. Since LiveRamp became an independent company in, we've demonstrated an ability to balance healthy investments in the business with improving profitability, and we expect this year to be no exception. As we enter what will surely be a recession, we will aggressively pursue cost efficiencies in many areas of the business, but will continue to prioritize investments in go-to-market and also critical R&D initiatives to optimize for long-term growth. The final opportunity I'll highlight is the opportunity to drive greater shareholder value. At our last call, we shared that we are not remotely satisfied with LiveRamp's recent share price performance. We don't think it appropriately reflects our opportunity or potential. While our top focus continues to be executing on the strategic initiatives I outlined above, we also remain committed to exploring creative ways to maximize shareholder value. In May, we announced plans to opportunistically repurchase up to an additional $150 million of LiveRamp's common stock before December 31. I am pleased to share that today we have repurchased approximately $80 million of that $150 million. In summary, we delivered a solid quarter but recognize that we have much work to do on top line acceleration and profitability. While the macro environment has become more challenging, we remain confident in our long-term market opportunity, and importantly, confident in our ability to manage and win through uncertain times. We are a critical component of our customers' data infrastructure. And finally, as we always have, you can expect us to closely monitor the business, quickly adjust as needed, and be good stewards of capital with a focus on maximizing long-term value for our customers and shareholders. With that, thank you again for joining us today. And a special thanks to our exceptional, exceptional customers, partners and to all LiveRampers across the globe for their ongoing hard work and support. We look forward to updating you on our progress in the coming quarters. And with that, I will now turn the call over to Warren.