 Artificial intelligence has the potential to transform areas as diverse and critical as education, health care, finance, mobility, and energy. Over the next three days, our objective is to connect AI innovators with public and private sector decision makers so that they can take promising strategy forward. We should be aware of the fact that AI technologies currently used in business and other applications could be extremely helpful in efforts to alleviate poverty, protect the environment, or improve education, if they were slightly reimagined and refashioned to a new purpose. In other words, AI solutions to urgent challenges in society may be hidden in plain sight right now. The SDGs address many of the same global challenges that XPRIZ competitions have worked on solving over the past several years, with many of these solutions taking advantage of AI. Our goal is to accelerate adoption globally for AI technologies and to spark creativity and innovation in human AI collaboration. We are super excited to see how these solutions benefit the majority of the population. Like many powerful technologies, AI offers us a choice, and the real question is, are we good, or is the technology good? At the moment, and I think with conferences like this, we are seeing a real awakening of the AI field to this question, to the challenge of using AI for something other than just making money. And I'm very, very optimistic that once it's awakened and realized the social responsibility that we have, our research community is going to step up. And remember, you're going to socialize this through Professor Penrose. We have to move on. Our next speaker is Andy Chen. He's a renowned... Oh my God! Well, my God, I'm so glad you're here. I'm so glad you're here. I'm so glad you're here. As much credit you've had, mine have really... The reason why I'm doing this is because I think now, at the time, when we can engage young people, as the gentleman just asked the question, well, how do we engage people, what do we do with them? Now, there's times coming in many forms. There's system failures. Now, the thing is intelligence, and these are words that I wouldn't like to define any of them. This represents, you know, our million-year-old investment to prevent hand this case of structure protected across the country's address about the challenges that threaten to the economy. I think tomorrow discussing, or at least one of the main tracks in this policy that we're going to be addressing. I had several meetings today. To be asked to run this important track and trust in AI, this is our team. That has AI and data science deep within the core capacity of the metric, but also... Yeah, and there was a champion. The chief of the United Nations nutrition section, Grona Loni, was phenomenally supportive. She was able to improve the device, which means that we can involve our mind rather than educate on the work. This is what we're referring to in the global delivery of the metric. Will we be crucial to implementing such applications? Ladies and gentlemen, first of all, I would like to thank ITU for including the World Health Organization in this very, very important event. The only way to avoid professor's history vision every possible scenario, I'm against it. Zoom policies in a more sort of way, because they will be exposed to risk. I don't think we can debate all they're not. And now it's avoiding this contact, because this can be a potentially unfaith object for the robot. In fact, right now we have been developing on Sophia as a standardized product. She has over 18 sisters. They're also good. Tell me, do you have a soap?