 We are entering a new age in which we, for the very first time in the history of humankind, will live with, work with, something else, an artifact that is not a human, not an animal. We've always used machines, even instructed machines, but this time the machines are autonomous, intelligent and can even learn. This development raises fundamental questions, questions about human values. As for instance, addressed in the work of Montesquieu, the big issue is about value alignment. How can we make sure that the new technologies work in accordance with human values? How can we make sure that a digital society will be even more humane than the analog society? There's a worldwide effort to develop responsible and trusted artificial intelligence and robots. At Tilburg University we want to contribute to this development by using our own expertise. We call our program, Building Trusty, the world's most trusted robot. In building the world's most trustful and social robot and artificial intelligence, we need all these scientific disciplines. Not just technology, but also the social sciences and the humanities, because those disciplines have deep knowledge about the ways that humans and society have functioned so far. These disciplines also have the knowledge about our core values, the variety among those values, the conflicts of those values. All these disciplines need to be on board. Already in 1964, at Tilburg University, Professor Max Öber, a professor in automated data processing, and by the way, the first and only Dutch world champion chess player, posed today's very urgent question, can computers think? Öber thought that a computer would never be able to beat a Grandmaster of chess. But he did not live long enough to see that in 1996, IBM's deep blue computer would beat the world champion Kasparov. I'm a professor of labor market studies, and in my field, I see the profound changes driven by the new technology. I focus on resilience. I try to develop strategies that accommodate both change, dynamics and social cohesion. And this is why we took the trusty initiative.