 Tansana, welcome, your former advisor to Prime Minister Atayama in Japan, and now your attorney at law for Joe's days. Tell me, you've been talking on a panel about the global enterprises, isn't there an automatic tension between globalization and the perceived national origin of a company? Have you got partners? For example, if you take Apple. People think of Apple as an American corporation, but it is everywhere in the world. Does that pose a problem for regulators and also for Apple itself, or Google or Facebook or whatever? I don't think so. Well, yes, I told this in the panel. The data protection issue is getting very much tensed. In particular in Europe, because of the maybe initiated by the Snowden case, many people are concerned about the privacy and the data protection issue. That is the same thing in Japan. The Japan has right away changed the data protection or privacy protection act. So now it's almost a similar standard to Europe, to the United States about that. So there's a way of resolving this? Yes, but in many cases, Europe is more serious about such a data itself can be used to buy some way the national security, SNA, and so on, this is of the United States. That is not the really well-perceived in Japan publicly. So the more what is a simple privacy issue is now discussed, but the global transferring the data into the one country to another is not really the issue in Japan yet. You've been on this very interesting panel, but what do you find interesting about the World Policy Conference itself? Well, I had the opportunity to participate in this World Policy Conference since Marrakech, so that's a third edition I think, and I found compared with some other, the International Conference, the World Policy Conference itself is very much quietly discussing very much important issue. So of course networking is important, but at the same time real, the plenary sessions discussion itself is very much educative for us, for me. The main issue is because this is bilingual between French and English, I do learn a lot of the something, the Middle East issue, which is more related to Europe than the Asia, the far East, like Japan. So the two understand what is really going on, this in daily life and so on. It's very, very much educative for us. Very nice to hear. Tatsano, thank you so much for being with us.