Thanks, Kyle. Good afternoon everyone and thanks for joining us on our Q3, 2024 System1 earnings call. Despite a mixed quarter with respect to the overall advertising marketplace, we delivered a strong quarter with many positives, including exceeding the high end of guidance on EBITDA. System1 delivered almost $89 million of revenue and $38 million of gross profit. Adjusted EBITDA came in at $10.3 million. These results were driven by the continuation of the trends we discussed last quarter. Our owned and operated products continue to perform well, with revenue up 16% sequentially from the second quarter. As a reminder, our owned and operated products are our businesses, which have organic users and they are not heavily reliant on System1 spending marketing dollars for their growth. Our largest owned and operated products are Startpage, our private search engine MapQuest, our mapping solution that competes with Google and Apple Maps and CouponFollow, our promo code website that enables consumers to get great deals while they shop. Now in contrast to the growth in these products, our marketing-driven business lines continue to see the effects of significant choppiness, with our largest advertising partner, which is Google. Now while Google's overall advertising business is doing fine, the specific area of Google we partnered with which is called their search partner network has underperformed the rest of the Google business. Because we are closely tied to the search partner network, choppiness within this business line at Google, has translated into underperformance on our marketing-driven businesses. That said, and I'll go into this later, we are optimistic that our businesses tied to Google will return to growth in 2025. On the technology side, we continue to see returns from our continued investment in our RAMP platform as we integrate AI deeply into RAMP. We were able to create and launch new marketing campaigns faster and more efficiently, and our product and engineering teams are moving faster than ever. And on our expense side, our focus on reducing OpEx continues and we're having a positive impact with OpEx decreasing 5% sequentially. All right. Let's get into some of the business details, starting with our owned and operated businesses. Total owned and operated revenue was $71 million, up 7% year-over-year but down 9% from last quarter. Adjusted gross profit was $26 million, up 11% year-over-year and down 4% from last quarter. The sequential revenue and gross profit declines were caused by a decrease in advertising spend of approximately $5.5 million. Although advertising spend declined, sessions on our O&O properties were over $2 billion, up 125% year-over-year and up 3% from last quarter. RPS and CPS both decreased from the second quarter making it the third consecutive quarter of declines in these metrics. This trend is driven by lower cost-per-click rates in the United States, as well as a mix shift towards international markets, which also have lower monetization rates in the US. In Q3, international revenue represented 35% of owned and operated revenue compared to 24% in Q3 of 2023. The spread between RPS and CPS in Q3 was $0.13 or 59% compared to $0.04 or 55% in Q2. Overall, I am pleased that we have been able to scale our international efforts quite a bit. But unfortunately, this was offset by a decline in our domestic marketing-driven businesses. In Q3, we launched over 12,000 new marketing campaigns and over 50% increase from Q1 of this year. The investments in RAMP are paying off and enabling us to greatly increase our launch throughput with campaign launches increasing every quarter, this year. As I mentioned, our O&O products continue to perform really well and in Q3 generated approximately 29% of total O&O revenue and 75% of our O&O gross profit. CouponFollow has continued to have a strong year following a series of Google search algorithm updates that started in May and that benefited the promo code and couponing sites with the best technology. In Q3, CouponFollow experienced a 47% sequential and 108% year-over-year increase in organic sessions to its website and the number of users of our promo code browser extension has more than doubled. Startpage, our private search engine continues to execute well and grew user sessions 22% year-over-year. In addition we recently completed the rollout of our private browser app by launching the Android version, which joins our iOS version we rolled out in Q2. So far we have seen significant downloads and engagement with more than 200,000 downloads across Android and iOS. And on MapQuest, we saw 15% growth year-over-year in user sessions and recently have seen the highest usage of our MapQuest mapping service since we acquired the business in 2019. I should add a little perspective to this accomplishment. When we acquired MapQuest from Verizon in 2019, it was a 23-year-old brand in serious decline. And on the Internet it is highly unusual and very difficult to resuscitate a brand and bring it back to life. Our MapQuest team has not only injected new life back into MapQuest we are seeing record usage days and are rolling out new innovative products such as our new private Maps app. Overall, our organic products give us a significant hedge against the recent volatility we've seen in our marketing-driven O&O business. Because this business has been so choppy over the last several quarters, I thought it would be useful to get into more detail about as to the causes. At the highest level, our marketing-driven businesses are driven by two factors; the cost of buying traffic on our buy-side and the amounts we receive for monetizing that traffic with advertisers on our sell-side. For the last four quarters or so, our buy-side costs at our traffic sources like Meta, Google, and programmatic display networks have been relatively stable and in some cases increasing as the overall marketing as the overall advertising market rebounds. Our integration of AI into our RAMP platform has enabled us to scale our campaign launches on the buy-side and our bidding algorithms have become increasingly sophisticated. I'm really pleased with all the work we have done to scale our buy-side efforts. Now, in contrast, the sell-side has been the root of almost all of our marketing business-related issues. To understand those issues, it's important to remember that much of our sell-side revenue is derived from Google and specifically, the Google Search Partner Network I refer to as SPN. The SPN is comprised of non-Google-owned websites and search engines that show Google advertising and it's distinct from Google.com or YouTube or other Google properties. Google specifically calls out the SPN segment in its earnings. And if you look at the Google's financial results, which I'm sure many of you do, you will see that SPN has remained largely flat, while the rest of the Google business has climbed. System1 is a very large participant in the SPN via our publishing network and much of our marketing revenue is generated by purchasing advertising on ad networks like Meta and sending that traffic to advertisers via the SPN. Our core issue related to the SPN is that we have seen large fluctuations in what Google pays us for traffic we send to the SPN. Now, there are several reasons for this, but the most important one is that Google has been making significant efforts to improve conversions for advertisers who advertise on the SPN. These efforts include policy changes improved screening of traffic quality and significant product improvements. The efforts are critical to maintaining the health of the ecosystem because the traffic that flows through SPN has to convert for advertisers who advertise on the network. While Google regularly makes pricing adjustments and product changes to ensure high traffic quality its efforts have ramped up considerably in the past year. Now, System1 applauds Google's efforts. And as one of Google's largest and highest-quality partners, we have been at the forefront of working with Google to improve the quality of the SPN. Unfortunately as Google rolls out product updates designed to improve the overall network quality, the immediate effect is volatility that impacts all partners including System1. Now, as the cadence of the product updates has increased, it has been challenging even for the higher quality partners like System1 to keep pace and adjust. Now, fortunately all of these efforts appear to be having the desired effect of increasing traffic quality, which in turn means that advertisers will benefit more which ultimately will increase advertising rates paid by advertisers in the long-term. As the Google Search Partner Network rebounds, we believe System1 is well-positioned to benefit. We've invested heavily in RAMP including leveraging AI and machine learning processes for real-time traffic quality detection. In addition we have always worked closely with our network partners to make sure that we are preserving advertiser trust while maintaining a quality user experience. In short, the more Google focuses on its efforts to maximize value to consumers and advertisers, the more System1 will benefit. Now moving on to our Partner Network business. Partner Network revenues was $18 million and adjusted gross profit was $13 million. Revenue decreased 17% year-over-year, but was up 5% sequentially. Adjusted gross profit decreased 5% year-over-year and 3% sequentially. Total sessions were $2.3 billion up 159% year-over-year and up 13% sequentially. Partner Network RPS declined 68% year-over-year and 7% quarter-over-quarter. The higher sessions and lower RPS were driven by the same trends that we saw in our O&O marketing business, lower domestic pricing and a bigger mix shift to international markets. In Q3, average revenue per partner increased 7% versus the second quarter. Total active partners decreased slightly from Q2 to approximately 290 partners. At the end of Q3, we had 58 scaled partners in line with second quarter. We consider a platform customer to be a scaled partner when they are generating at least $50,000 of revenue per quarter on ramp. Now like our O&O marketing business, our partner network is dependent on the strength and steadiness of the Google Search Partner Network and therefore is subject to the same dynamics I outlined above. Similar to our O&O marketing business, as the SPN rebounds and pricing increases, we expect that growth in our Partner Network will follow. Overall, I'm really pleased with our performance in the third quarter. Our team has been executing well. Certain parts of our business are exceeding our expectations and we are well-positioned for growth in the areas that remain challenged once the SPN studies. Our product and engineering teams are executing well. We're doing more with fewer people and we remain tightly focused on controlling OpEx. We aren't yet where we want to be but things are moving in the right direction. In light of the ongoing volatility in the marketplace that I highlighted earlier in my comments, we've decided to not provide guidance for Q4 at this time. If we see improvements in stability we may revisit the possibility of offering guidance later in the quarter. And to close my section of the call, as always, I would like to remind you that management is the largest shareholder group in System1 and our interests are very aligned with yours. As our business gets back into growth mode, we're excited to have you along for the ride. I now have things off to Tridi to discuss our quarterly results in more detail. Thanks a lot Tridi. Take it away.