 Welcome back to the AI for Good Global Summit here in Geneva. Now one emphasis this time round has really been on the performing arts and the person who's kind of responsible for that is right next to me, Christian Rao from State Studio. So we haven't seen much of the performing arts until now this week. Tell me why? I don't know. I think it's a great opportunity that we have it for the first time this year and I think a lot of people appreciated the possibility to look at the subject matter a little bit from different angles and directions. So we had an art corner here at the conference consisting of a little exhibition and bringing artists from around the world there to show their take on how AI can be used to promote the sustainable development goals. And together with ITU and the United Nations we organized a wonderful evening on Wednesday at the Human Rights Room in the United Nations headquarters and I think it was a beautiful occasion to inspire the people here. So for people who weren't there of course, what is the link between AI and music? The link between AI and music. Well, first a lot of musicians are using AI now as a tool to enhance their creative practice. And that's very exciting. It can be very technology driven of artificial intelligence really programming music independently. And there's other takes as well where people think that if there's just a machine creating music that's the human element is lacking. So they rather use it in kind of like a more synergistic way which we saw on Wednesday nights when artists and machines are jamming together to reach next levels in their practice. And I saw that there was artwork as well at your art corner. How does a painter use or sculptor use AI for that? Also different ways. We had one painter here Roman Lipski and he's the first painter in the world he claims to use AI as a muse, the first artificial intelligence muse to again put his creative practice on a different level. So he's training a neural network to study his autistic style and he can use that then to alter images or look at images from different angles and then he reflects on that and studies it and then creates new images that he again feeds into the machine so it's this never-earning circle of creativity. He says since then he never had a creative block anymore so he's the happiest painter in the world. You were here for the first edition. You're here now. What are your thoughts on the evolution? It's amazing. The first edition was a couple of hundred people at the ITU thinking about all those very important issues of artificial intelligence and the SDGs and being very driven and passionate about the cause and it's just amazing to see what level it reached now. So it's really fantastic what ITU put together. I'm really happy and honored to be the art partner of the conference and it would be great to extend on that and also push the cultural side a bit because it's a beautiful way to bring more people into the conversation and if we want to achieve the SDGs and if AI should be a meaningful part in that it's all about inclusiveness and that means we have to bring the conversation to the people and the world of culture is just a very important tool for that so I think this is how we could support it. Christian Rao there from Berlin on the art angle of this summit. Thanks very much.