 Patrick Nicolet, welcome from Capgemini. You've been talking about the digital era and the challenges of digital technologies. What is the great challenge from a business point of view? For a business point of view, but also from a social point of view, because every innovation can only deploy a get-full effect if you have the related social model that accompany every innovation, by the way, not just what we experience right now. So the biggest opportunity and challenge is the amount of data that is available today to manage, to process, to analyse, to make sense of it, to exploit. And this is really a... I mean, it's a torrent of data, isn't it? And when you use the word exploit, do you mean it has a value? Yes. So you could roughly... The data that are available relates to three components. One, we started with what we call structured data, which is the one you manage in your accounting systems and so on and so forth in the boundaries of your institution, public or private. Then you have the internet, the data from the internet. These data results from the interaction between human beings. And then now we call big data, deluge of data. It's because to this, we have added the connected devices. So devices, whatever it is, a jet engine, an alarm or whatever, that generate these data. And the amount is huge. And the understanding, the ability to understand what it means creates the opportunity for wealth and value. And in terms of this particular conference, World Policy Conference, when you discuss these ideas, do you find that they bring out new ideas or are people simply talking their familiar thoughts to each other? No, I think... Because this is a real challenge, this new technology. What we just discussed in terms of the world policy is the context. It's not the actual topic. The actual topic is how you govern it from a policy standpoint. And frankly, it's very difficult to govern such a fast-moving context, if I may say. And that's why I put emphasis on the ethical question, and notably, as you heard from another participant to the panel, the link to artificial intelligence, which you can define simply as learning machine. And then they learn how far they will learn, what kind of decision will they be able to do, and there are a lot of development. This is, in my view, one of the most fundamental questions in terms of policy that technology creates. Fascinating. Particularly, thank you very much indeed.