The free academic text analytics and machine learning platform DiscoverText, and the spin off TrustDefender, are now Canadian software projects running on fast new hardware in a Vancouver, BC high-speed co-location site. Software operations in the United States after 20 years in universities, start-up incubators, the commercial cloud, and finally my basement for the last 6 or so years, are officially over. Canadian researchers with requirements to keep sensitive research data in Canada please take note. For 15 years, with the exception of about three months, we have had access to Twitter data. That access (currently a paid subscription) ends this month. If you want one last dataset of up 500,000 Tweets from the last 12 months, set up a meeting and I can get that for you. There are costs for data access and labor to access the chunks of up to 20,000 Tweets per download. We have migrated about 1,000 projects with 300,000,000 curated Tweets to preserve these idiosyncratic archival records for future research studies by academics interested in the topics like the first three days of #metoo, #BLM, COVID-19, and too many things related to American elections. If you have any historical Twitter in JSON format, you can load it for collaborative research purposes and see the (live) Tweets in our platform using the authentic Twitter display. I am excited to be returning to school to start a Masters program in library science at UBC this fall. My goal is to focus on trust in information systems. At the 2025 Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, to be held in Vancouver this year, I will be offering a 4-hour pre-conference workshop September 10, 2025 9:00 AM - 1:00 PM titled "Teaching and Researching Trust with Large Scale Twitter Datasets" https://connect.apsanet.org/apsa2025/pre-conference-short-courses/ If you want to be a part of the workshop, I could use a few assistant presenters in Vancouver to help me set up and execute what could be one of the larger workshops I have had to date. I am going to try and keep these tools free for academics as long as possible. Some of the core annotation, measurement, and adjudication features designed in 2007 are highly functional and efficient scientific instruments. https://tinyurl.com/DTCitations ~Stu -- Dr. Stuart W. Shulman Founder and CEO, Texifter Editor Emeritus, *Journal of Information Technology & Politics*