 We have our long-time partners. UNESCO has been with us with FOSSAsia for 10 years, so it may introduce you to Miss Misako Ethels from UNESCO. Thank you. Thank you. Good morning and thank you for the introductions. Welcome to the FOSS Open Tech Summit in Thailand, which is for the first time co-organized with FOSSAsia. And UNESCO and kindly hosted by the National Innovation Agency. So we have a long-standing relationship with FOSSAsia. UNESCO has been one key UN agency supporting the free and open source software from more than 10 years, and we have been also supporting the communities. And so in that presentation, I would like to introduce why we are supporting that and why free and open source software is so relevant for the new Sustainable Development Agenda 2030. Okay, so you may probably know that UNESCO is a UN agency that was created at the end of the Second World War, after having seen all these horrors related to the Second World War with the beautiful mandate to create peace in the mind of men and women. And we do that through education, science, culture, and communications. And we have a very, very important mandate in our constitution, which is here, which is to promote the free flow of ideas by world and images and maintain and increase and diffuse knowledge, which is really at the heart of the spirit behind the force. And so our work in the area of software has started 20 years ago, where UNESCO has been developing free and open source software long time ago in the area of data management, data mining, statistics. One of the most famous one is CDSIS, which transfers libraries, small library management. And then we started to advocate for free and open source software supporting the communities. And now we are really applying the principles and the model which are behind the free and open source software across the organization, within the organizations. And we believe that the free and open source software will be more and more important and relevant with the adoption of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, because sustainable development requires us to integrate into any company's business model, the concern for the environment and also the concern for the society, which is such as waste management, the use of natural resources, inclusion, gender equality, diversity, and social condition of staff, etc. So why force is so relevant for sustainable development? Because as you all know, it requires partnerships not only within the organization, but with external group which leads to innovations, new ideas. There is also the culture of contribution, which is very much deep in force, which also ensures the stability and longevity of the project because it depends on us to make it sustainable and to sustain. It's not locked in the hand of few people. There is also a return on investment from the collaborators through the use, the adaptations, and UNESCO is actually applying those principles and values which are the core of behind force within our organization. So let me present you some of the activities. So we have been already doing, I guess, yes, two or three hackathon at ForceAsia Summit where we provided opportunities to meet, discuss and collaborate with diverse group. The last hackathon we did was we managed ForceAsia bringing the community of open tech developers and UNESCO brought some indigenous participants to find together some solutions to the linguistic diversity and the need to safeguard indigenous languages. And we did that for the International Year of Indigenous Languages, which is this year. We also support the building of the coding skill amongst the young generations. This is the initiative that we do that through use mobile initiative where we also support the use of free and open source software. And UNESCO also re-reads all our publications under the open access policy, which means that anything that UNESCO produces, you can copy, paste, translate, use it as far as you inform UNESCO and you bring back to the global communities as global commons. So we are the first UN agencies doing that. We also promote the principle of openness on internet development. And tomorrow we will be hosting a workshop on internet assessment based on UNESCO's agreed indicators, which is called Indicators for Internet Universality, which actually based on forking principles for a healthy internet ecosystem, which can work for everybody. And we say that the internet should be human right based, open based on open standards, provide opportunities for small enterprise to grow accessible in terms of accessibility to marginalized groups, people with disabilities, women and girls, and any decision relating to the internet should be driven by multi-stakeholder participation. So we will be presenting tomorrow starting at night in UNESCO workshop where you are all welcome to come the assessment framework and how we are applying this to the case of internet development in Thailand. And we also as part of our mandate to promote free access to free and open source software, we also promote the preservation and access to software source code as a heritage because we believe in the importance of preserving source code from the past, which contain the knowledge and the intelligence of developers to make them available for future generations. There is no such a library in the area of software source code like, you know, you can find it in other scientific areas. So this is a new initiative which is led by my colleague, my colleague in Paris, David Estolte. And we also promote every year, it was last Saturday, the International Day for Universal Access to Information, which is traditionally known as the right to know day. So it provides opportunities for people to mobilize for their own right to access to information, whether it is governmental information or any public information held by public bodies. And yes, and that is it. Thank you very much.