 Well, broadband is absolutely vital, particularly in the developing world, if you want to attract foreign direct investment into countries to help transform them and also to help indigenous companies you need broadband because the connected world where it's really where it's at, in other words if you want to export fruits or vegetables or resources out of countries you need connectivity and that's why I think the work of the Broadband Commission is so important. I think we should take a long-term view, we should look out to 2030 and say to ourselves what do we want to achieve over the next 14-15 years as goals and hard goals to make sure that we bring broadband to the developing world. Well, I think we need to radically overhaul regulation, for example, in countries. Regulators need to be told to issue spectrum, give spectrum to operators who want to roll out broadband but they should have obviously the caveat of delivering. They can't sit on spectrum without actually implementing it and bringing broadband to rural areas, to urban areas, but across whole countries as such and I think that's a very important thing. The second thing is spectrum fees should be abolished in that case. Where a company is investing heavily in capital expenditure, build broadband networks, they should have basically no spectrum fees because a fee is really just a tax on stopping broadband getting to the consumer and the end user.