 We're here at BEYOND 2015, the Global Youth Summit in San Jose, Costa Rica, and I'm very pleased to be joined by Ashley James Hunt. Ashley, thank you very much for being with us today. Thank you for having me. It's very kind. I'd like to start off by asking you about your presence here at the summit and really just what your expectations are of it. Okay, so the sort of capacity that I'm hearing is really one related to sort of cyber security and cyber warfare in particular. So across the last year I've been doing research into cyber warfare and particularly international and domestic policy relating towards it from governments and institutions. And so I was particularly interested when Dr. Toure spoke at the Geneva Press Club a few months ago and very correctly identified a cyber warfare as an international threat. And so I felt compelled to write him a letter to not only concur with what he said, but to expound my views upon it and suggest to him the implementation of an explicit set of cyber terminology. That will help facilitate governments and institutions in dealing not only with the policy aspects with sanctions and laws and help a legal framework to ensure that we have protection for not only the youth, but for everyone using the internet. Now obviously the average age of the summit is quite young. How do you think that that plays in the world to influence the leaders today? Well, absolutely. I think it's absolutely imperative that the youth is the focus of the summit. And for more forums across the world for youth engagement is absolutely vital because not only is it our generation that, you know, the effects are going to come upon. And I mean, of course, it does need collaboration between the old generation and us. I mean, I particularly think so far it's important and vital that we've had the support of the UN, the ITU because our policy ideas are, although ambitious, perhaps nothing without credible international institutions supporting them. So I think we've had a great mixture so far. But you know, it is sort of awe inspiring to look at, you know, the fact that, you know, all of us here are young and, you know, some of the achievements that, you know, most of us have already made, but particularly are coming together to make, you know, the world a better place, I suppose, so it's very, very good. What are your hopes going to be the outcome of this summit? My own personal hopes are, you know, really sort of explicit policy that will be taken to the UN, implemented in international law, so that, you know, the goals that we have beyond 2015 are ones that will help shape our generation, give us best prosperity as possible to those parts of the world that currently don't have it. You know, we've currently seen, you know, sort of videos from the Middle East, Africa, where places have no technology at all. And, you know, you know, about three billion people in the world at the moment are connected out of seven billion, you know, so less than half. And so, frankly, I think we should do all that is possible to engage as many people across the international spectrum. And I think that for me, that comes not in sort of great overviews of a political verbiage, but, you know, really explicit policies that will have a knock-on effect that will really affect the lives of many youths across the world. Thank you, Jay. Thank you very much, Dave Beames. Thank you for having me. It's very kind.