 Welcome to the World Summit on the Information Society 2016 in Geneva, Switzerland. And I'm joined by Yvette Ramos, President of Swiss Engineering, Romande, here in Switzerland. She's also Director of the International Network of Women Engineers and Scientists. Yvette, welcome, and I understand that you've been having a workshop this morning on drawing up a Code of Conduct for ICTs. Why is the Code of Conduct needed? In fact, we believe the engineers and architects of the world that it's been enough now. Many things have happened, many codes of ethics and code of conducts and morals and etc. have been built for the past 10, 20, 30 years, but yet we are not there. We want concrete actions on the field and we believe that with the action lines of the WISIs, with the new SDGs now, we can find concrete actions and concrete things to be done with the engineers in ICTs, with ICT people in general, with men and women who want to achieve more than what we've just achieved until now. Where then have been the challenges up to now? I think until now, challenges have been barriers in general. We have concrete projects that we can run on the field. We have the money. I believe strongly that the money is never an issue really, but to get things done is a bit different. And sometimes barriers, political barriers, social barriers, many barriers can happen. And we try this morning to envisage complex actions without barriers. In fact, we want really to work for inclusion and we believe we can do that. And at this workshop, you were saying there are men and women. Where were they from? Actually, we had a wonderful panel of eight people. I was moderating and we had a French speaker. We had, I was representing Switzerland, but I'm a native of Europe, Portugal, France. We had Latin America in a remote participation. Wonderful. Thank you, ITU, for this amazing tour. We had also Vietnam. So Asia kind of was represented. We had Cameroon with the participation of René Submaget. She's very known in building ICT projects with Africa. And we had UK. We had, I would say, many parts of the world. We were really international and also men and women. Actually, this is maybe the first panel where I see a majority of women speaking. So that was a wonderful opportunity. As you say, it's a wonderful opportunity, but what happens now? How do you build on this to make sure it actually happens? Actually, we decided to create a task team and a lot of people from the room, from the audience was willing to help. They are not engineers, but we welcome all competencies. As long as we are constructive, we want to build concretely towards crossing issues, crossing projects, SDGs, action lines of the whizzies and inclusion. Thank you very much, Eva Ramos, for joining us. The president of Swiss Engineering and director of the International Network of Women Engineers and Scientists. So please also do join us on the ITU YouTube channel because we'll be conducting a number of interviews with interesting participants from all over the world who are attending the Wissies Forum in Geneva this week.