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Hello, welcome to my lightning talk on Finnish Personal Identity Codes and an R package that handles them, Hetu. My name is Pyry Kantanen, and I come from rOpenGov, a collective of R package developers on open government data and related topics. First, to put things in context, here you can see numbers from all five Nordic countries. Sweden was the first Nordic country to introduce its national identification number system in 1947. And this influenced other countries in the following decades. You can probably notice similarities, even at the quick glance. Today, we will concentrate on Finnish national identification numbers, and here are two imaginary examples that we will go through in the following slides. The Finnish personal identity code consists of four parts. The birthdate in short format, a century character, a personal number, and a control character. The century character has three valid options. A dash for 1900s, A for 2000s, and the plus sign for 1800s. The personal