 So we're here at the ITU in Geneva, and I'm very pleased to be joined by Professor Thomas Wiegen from Fraunhafer HHI and TU Berlin. Thomas, welcome, and thank you very much indeed for joining us here today. Thanks for having me. So we're here at the AI for Good Global Summit. What in your opinion is the value and the importance of creating such a platform for international dialogue on AI? I think this is a great event. It's excellent. The organization is excellent. It's an incredible crowd, and we have had a lot of interesting discussions. It has been really important to have this event, and I hope there will be follow-ups. And the ITU is actually the right place to do this. Okay. So we've heard over the past few days that the AI summit is exploring how AI innovation can advance the sustainable development goals. You're involved with education. Do you think AI can help to further education? Of course. It's an extremely powerful tool, and we can actually make use of it in many, many ways. Education is one of them, increasing the efficiency of things and having an automatic way of doing cognitive tasks is another way. But when you design these systems, you have to also balance other aspects, like trusts, privacy, security, safety. So I think one of the results that I'm seeing at the summit is that there should be an integral approach to all of these things, and they should be brought together, and you should consider all these aspects from the very beginning. And you mentioned trust, and trust is very important if we're going to trust ICTs in our life and later on, maybe AIs. Do you think trust is something that can be standardized and put into the AI ecosystem? Yes, I think so. If the AI system is based on data and there's a transparency, and the way we think about data is designed in a smart way, then the trust, if it's built into the system, and it's clear how it works to the people, and it's safe and the other parts are fulfilled, then it can be built in and it can be standardized. And if you look at the information society, you have trust, maybe IoT and 5G, what do you see as the role of machine learning and AI within the context of 5G or IoT, for example? So I view AI as a very important component of a bigger picture. We are looking at a digital transformation, and part of that is a digital twin, which is our digital model in the computer of the real world, and we're using sensors and computers and communication in order to create this model and to maintain it. Now you have to have these components work together, so you can use actually AI to improve communication, you can use communication to improve sensing, you can use communication to improve AI, etc., so these things all work together, and we have to actually tackle them together. This is actually something we do at the Heinrich Hertz Institute in Berlin, we are looking at the digital transformation as a whole, and we are working on these topics. So what's new in the video coding arena these days? Well, actually the success story that we have started 17 years ago, or 18 years ago, was the development of AVC or the ITU called H264 and is continuing. So H-AVC is becoming the next world video coding standard, and we are currently preparing for the next one after H-AVC or the ITU called H265. So very exciting, great adoption, and we are looking forward to making another big start, and maybe we get another Emmy for it. Well, I certainly hope so, and I wish you the best of luck with that and a successful rest of the conference. Thank you very much.