 How do you see the role of institutional media on the internet in today's reprimanded interdependence regarding states and economies? Have we become a tool? Well, institutional media is not only about the new products that you produce which indeed can be remixed and weaponized. It is also about institution, a process to make new cognitive tools to make sense of this holistic interdependent world. And so I think one of the ways to think about media institutions is that it represents a process to discover the world together and if you democratize that process, enabling more people to be included into the newsroom, into the newsmaking process, then it educates not only people as readers but also people as journalists. As a concrete example, during the presidential election we have a lot of institutional media and social media partners collaborating together to make a fact-check process that involves hundreds, almost a thousand people now, to collaborate in the process. What institutional media is already doing, which is turning the public videos and interviews into transcripts, validating the transcripts, making sure that all the fact-based statements on it are fact-checked and investigated on a more controversial point. The point is that institutional media is already doing so, but less publicly and less collaboratively. And if we can make sure that everybody regained the agency from learning of the news agencies, then we can make sure that everybody partake in the journalistic process and it's this process that furthers democracy.