 Day four of the Whistler's Forum and while the formal dialogues were still in session, participants were also getting on with some freestyle thinking. You know the best ideas and innovations don't necessarily come out of a stuffy office, but over a cup of coffee in a relaxed atmosphere or a glass of orange juice. Here, this is what the Whistler's Forum is all about, a brainstorming session to come out with ideas to move things in maybe a different direction. This is how it looks on paper, a real work of art. The aim of this session is to re-examine if the outcome documents from previous Whistler's phases are still relevant given the recent innovations in ICTs. That's why these delegates are having their imaginations prodded with some creative collaboration. It's very important to see if during the last ten years some new emerging trends arrived which have to be captured and have to be addressed at the global level. For us it's very important because we are talking about the future of our next generations and they will make us accountable for this if we are really addressing this, what will influence their socio-economic development at the country, regional and international level. Today the Whistler's Forum invited local school students for a session on youth and ICTs. What's most exciting about the internet for us is that we can share our work and get work from the other people. I mean it's like a platform where teamwork is the basis. The risk and dangers of the net. For example when we publish things on Facebook such as photos or just a simple post or we poke people. We are worried about if it's going to leave a trace in the net. If for example when we are going to apply for a job in ten years or five years is it going to stay there? Is people going to see what we posted? Because of course now we don't realise how it can harm our future profile. When it comes to youth and ICTs there's certainly a bright side but there is also regrettably a dark side. There are hazards now that no previous generation has ever had to deal with such as inappropriate online content. This was recently an issue with public Wi-Fi in a leading coffee chain in Britain. We're talking about public spaces where children and young people are going to be found then you have an obligation to make sure it's as safe as it can be for them. This is not about free speech or censorship. This is about a time and a place, it's about common decency. We've all done it, you're driving, someone pings you a text so you decide to send back a completely redundant response on a miniscule keyboard while operating a heavy piece of machinery at speed not a good idea. How dangerous is it to text and drive? It's incredibly dangerous. They say it's 23% more likely that you'll get in an accident if you're texting and driving. This is the first year in the United States that they've noted that there's more people with fatalities from texting and driving than drinking and driving. There's been a lot of text messages that have kind of gotten out in the media of the last message somebody sent before they were killed and one is ceasing. I'll be right there. My life is a lot more important than a text message. That's it from day four at the Wiss's Forum. Stay safe online and whatever you do, don't text while driving.