 In the future, we will not have jobs. You won't have a job. I won't have a job. Or my sister, or my brother. My unborn son won't have a job. There's not going to be security of monthly salary, no security of pension arrangements, no security of union knit networks, or Golden Watch after 30 years of service. And that is a problem. And that is a big social problem. Because once you take the security away from people, people get scared. And when masses of people get scared, they start doing stupid things. They go to streets. They start marching. They start rioting. They go and shout, give us jobs! They vote for a populist to be their president, because he promised to give them jobs back. He's not going to give them jobs back. Because these jobs don't exist anymore. Because of technological revolution. And the technological revolution will change our concept of work. Let me tell you good news. It is a good thing. It is a happy news. It's a happy thing that this change is happening. And I give you an example. A doctor is a profession that we all appreciate. We've all been to one, and we probably will visit one soon enough. It takes 10 years to doctor to graduate. And it is a big investment also from the state point of view, but also to the students. If a doctor makes a cancer diagnosis, he or she will do the right diagnosis by 85% of chance. If an artificial intelligence does the same thing, the diagnosis, it will increase up to 95% of chance. But if these two work together, it will increase to 98%. It's faster, it's better, it's cheaper. As a profession, I am an urban analyst. I study cities, how they can be happier places people to live. And by the way, my job will be replaced by artificial intelligence in a couple of years, and I'm happy about it because it will do way better than I ever did. But I keep stumbling upon a problem that how we plan cities. We use three parameters, where they put homes, where they put jobs, and how much space do they require. So we understand the concept of work as a place, as an actual square meter amount of space that we go in the morning, do certain tasks that somebody else gave us, and live in the afternoon. And that world is gone. Those works don't exist anymore because these works, the work and jobs, are based on industrial revolution times. In factories, basically. This is how the work looks like. We can sit on our own home couch with our pyjamas on and take part of an important conference call or we can run a presidential campaign as a hologram, as they did in France last year. It's faster, it's better, it's cheaper. In the future, we will have jobs that didn't exist five years ago, one year ago, or even six months ago. Maybe we will be 3D printing muscles or creating artificial organs or limbs or making artificial hamburgers in lab. Maybe we will be having daily conversation with Sophie, artificial intelligence robot. Maybe we will be nostaltists, vertical farmers, or end-of-life therapists. So, my humble request is, don't be afraid. For the sake of my baby. Don't go to streets, don't go marching, please. Because technological change will happen no matter what. The future generations, including my son, will do more meaningful jobs that our parents ever did, that you ever did. The bulk work will be left to robots, and my son is going to be master of empathy, master of interpreting feelings, or master of touching. Sounds funny now, but does it have to five years? So, technological change will happen, you approve it or not. You can choose which side are you. With robots or against them?