 Human rights are more relevant than ever as we navigate technologies and our penetration into very, very many parts of our lives. We need to have a guidepost with which to decide, you know, are these going to be used for good or for evil. And I think that guidepost is the universal declaration on human rights. We'll constantly be torn between wanting to be safe and wanting to advance. Some of the main challenges between now and 2030 will be in that tension to take advantage of all the benefits that technology and the fourth industrial revolution has to offer us. I don't think that rights are changing. I think they're universal and always will be. They're fundamental principles. The way we look at them through a technological lens may be slightly different. I work in the area of making sure that women and children can realize their rights. Coming to the Global Future Councils and interacting with them has allowed me to really expand my thinking on what the future for children means, the jobs they're going to have in the future, who they're going to become, the economies that they're entering into. And so it provides a broader vision for where children are headed.