 Now, I think that many of the issues which have been dealt with, covered more or less in this session, lead us in a natural way to the next two sessions. The next one is the sequence, technology, economy, and ethics, and the issue of data, for instance, which has been raised many, many times, and the issue of treatment of data has a lot to do with technology. So I am happy now to give the floor to Patrick Nicollet, who is a friend of a longstanding of the World Policy Conference, and who will be the moderator of this session. Patrick, the floor is yours. Thank you, Thierry, for the introduction. We move forward, the classical Thierry style, so there is no pause, so we just continue the discussion, and we will make the best weekend to have a session as lively as possible. The theme you heard is about technology, economics, and ethics in the area of health. We'll try to go beyond just COVID, but bear with us, there is no way that we cannot prefer the lessons learned from COVID in such an impactful event on the entire health sector. I have a panel here of distinguished experts. I will introduce them theme by theme, because we've decided, in fact, to break down the two hours into three topics that would allow, we hope, a more interactive session. The first one will be on technology in health care, who is in the driver's seat? I think it's a question we saw in Philly Gran in the first debate. The second one will be in health care, does the end of the thing, producing the domain of ethics, and then eventually does technology care about your health? I think there is a fundamental question about the role of technology and the way we as citizen consumer employer apprehend technology, and this will be the third debate. For each session, there will be two times complementary or contradictory intervention from the panelist, and then I will open up the floor for about 10 minutes of Q&A on these specific topics, and we will wrap up at the end of the session.