 We have an FOI law since 2008. Basically it says that every information or data that the states produce belongs to the citizens. The FOI law in Hungary is quite a progressive one, but the problem is that it has been amended in 2013. The FOI requests that are vexations can be denied by the authority. The access to information at the law that was passed in Rwanda in 2013 is actually very strong compared to what I've been hearing this morning at a liver telecon. So it requests that people provide any information in three days maximum. Information officers can say it's going to take a little bit longer than any bias in another week. So three days for everyone in the public, two days if you're a journalist, one day if someone's life or liberty are at risk. In Australia we're lucky to have quite good FOI laws, but they're disastrously not used. And so we created rights and knows to make people more aware of their FOI rights and hopefully to get them to start making requests, which Australians typically don't do. So anyone has the right to access information that public authorities hold and that's in the form of documents. So whilst you can't ask for information, you can ask for any document that they hold currently.