 If we take a scale of it, it's really global, so all countries are represented here. And the issues that are touched here are very important for us, for just regular people here. The weekend is an international symposium which should happen a long time ago, especially after the changes in the telecommunication sector for the last 24 years. It's important that within 24 years many things have changed around the world, especially about communication. And suddenly, internet came and nowadays when everyone talks about communication, we talk about internet, and that's where the whole debate is about. I understand that this regulation, as it is, is totally obsolete. So if we want to re-move it, we have to change it, but we have to change it entirely. What happens is that there are some points that are very difficult to attack. For example, everything that I have said about internet. To my judgment, internet cannot be included in any type of regulation, and less in a regulation of international telecommunications. So it's a good opinion. I think it's moving slowly but in the right direction. Well, I think it's going as expected. Countries are putting their positions on the table. We're seeing a lot of divergence of views, but I think we're still hopeful that the community can come together around a common perspective. So far, I think it's good, and I think we have a lot of outcomes. And I expect that if we continue like this, we will end up with getting a good tweet. I hope there will be some positive solutions of all the very questions, problems that we're facing in the 21st century. And it will be the decision which will sit for everyone, for every country. Well, I'll go back to the first two speeches. The first one from the ITU General Secretary himself, talking about open space, talking about cooperation between ICANN, the Internet Corporate for Science, Names and Number, Entity and ITU. So based on that, I think it's a place where the whole debate is open and transparency, of course, on my point of view, is on the agenda. It is not what's been said in the media around the world. It is for the government to make the freedom, the speech, the law and all these issues. That's not true. The real truth is to make the international telecommunication well-organized, well-established, rather than to become just a country holding something and the other country is sending spam to the other country and using the other resources, which is not good for what's happening now. I think that at the end of the day, the outcome will be absolutely beneficiary for every one of us and hopefully suitable for all the requirements that we have in our role today. Well, we're hopeful that this is a conference that's going to promote global connectivity of international telecommunications networks and that they'll focus on things that have worked in the field of international telecommunications, things like competition, transparency, private sector investment. So we're hopeful that that's the direction that the conference will go. I think it's still early, so we're not sure, but that's the position that we've come here to advocate. Because if it's not like that, we won't have any success.