 UL's relationship with Interpol goes back more than a decade and it's been very important in combating transnational organized crime related to counterfeiting. Our mission at UL is to promote safe living and working environments for people and one of the things we know is that counterfeit products often introduce risks and dangers into people's ordinary daily lives in their home, in their office, in their school, in their hospital. The IP Crime Investigators College was really started from an understanding that there was a need everywhere in the world to help educate law enforcement officials and customs officials who deal with IP crime as to the best practices, the best techniques, the best ways to address these issues. And we know that through education, through best practices, through awareness that we can increase our effectiveness at combating this crime. And so that was really the purpose of creating the IP crime college. And it was created in such a way that law enforcement people and customs officials everywhere in the world can have access to it without charge to make sure that cost doesn't become a barrier to people getting the education that can help them to improve their effectiveness against this crime. Working with Interpol, I believe, is essential. Interpol is the organization that can pull together police organizations, customs organizations, and national organizations into one effective force to combat IP crime. And my hope for the future is to see that relationship deepen, not only with Interpol but with other organizations around the world so that we can become an even more effective force at combating these criminals.