 I'm Frédéric Dubois. I'm the managing editor of the Internet Policy Review, a journal that is published by the Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society here in Berlin. The Internet Policy Review is a journal on internet policy, which means we're looking at regulation, at norms, standards all around the internet. So we're looking at things like how citizens are being surveilled by the state or by companies. We're looking at things like copyright online, but we're also looking at the creative scene, how creatives are using technologies and what policies apply. Data protection, often very serious stuff, but at the end of the day these serious things actually have an impact on our lives and this is why we're looking into this from a scientific perspective. As a journalist myself, I've been working on different topics and I've ended up working on internet topics a lot previously with an NGO, a non-governmental organization and now with the Humboldt Institute because I think that topics related to digitization or the internet, they're taking a lot of room these days in our lives and this is why journals like Internet Policy Review are important so that we don't take a short view but rather a long view on these topics and also a little detail that might be of interest is that the journal we're making, we're making it open access meaning that we're trying to do our part in changing the way academia is done and the publishing business is done. So just in a nutshell, open access is about providing research for free, no cost, to researchers, readers and that the researchers also don't have to pay to actually get their article published. So this is what we're doing, so we hope we're doing our little contribution in academia.