Abstract of Presentation: Does where you are born make your data more private than others? How do we deal with data of rural populations with no access and how do we process their health data? About the Author: Shamala Hinrichsen is a geneticist by training who switched gears to communicate healthcare and sciences. Her most significant projects recently include consulting the Ministry of Economy and Foreign Trade, Luxembourg, on promoting its life sciences, clean technologies, and ICT sectors globally. She founded Hanai after spending four months mapping the rural healthcare dissemination landscape across India. She is the mother of two young boys, and battled with the concept of birth lottery when she was among the other mothers out in the field. She also spent time with women in Mozambique, and found these women faced the same problems, even if the geography couldn’t have been more different. Hanai is an attempt to bridge the gap and make sure all women can take charge of their lives, regardless of where they are. Hanai is also a decentralized software service, with the potential to revolutionise services beyond healthcare.