 Well, welcome back to the third day of the AI for Good Global Summit, and I'm joined now by the chair of the IEEE, Computer Society. His name is Andy Chen, he's with me now. Andy, good to see you. Good to see you. What is the IEEE? Well, it's the Institute of Electronic and Electrical Engineering, and it's a professional association. We have about 400,000 members globally, and I'm focusing in Computer Society, which focuses on computers and engineering. And what brings you to the summit? Well, I basically, I was invited because of my background in several areas. One, my expertise in the power generation for cybersecurity, as well as my knowledge in the nuclear industries. But more importantly, my position as a board chair for the IEEE Computer Society, where we would like to be able to work collaboratively with different nations. We have about 160 countries that we have memberships on us. So almost every part of the globe, we have students join our associations, as well as professionals who have already graduated. And as we're on day three, what are your thoughts about this three-day gathering? It's quite amazing. It's very eventful, and there are so much opportunities. There are so many different aspects of the global. There are people interested in academia, people interested in government relationship, and people interested in the researchers, and people interested in industry. So it's really interesting bringing the tech company, as well as government policies, and at different levels. It's really, it's fascinating for me. And you're talking in your panel discussion about everybody's sharing the benefits of AI. Will that happen, or are you concerned that it's not happening? Well, I think one of the key things, important thing, and I was in the panel as a martyr, is that you have to design it correctly. You have to put in some, what we call, ethics, just like people into the AI. So it does the right thing. It doesn't harm people. It does actually benefit the human being, rather than...