 I believe the Digital Security Challenge is a great opportunity for the member countries to come to IGCI, to know IGCI a little better, but most importantly, be able to exercise what they do on a daily basis, but in a safe environment where they can contribute with colleagues and learn a bit more on how to solve crimes and how to present it to a real court. This is the first time that we organize this kind of competition. This is the first time Interpol has a Digital Security Challenge and we want by this learn a bit more of the mechanism of this kind of exercise. We believe we are very successful for this first edition. We had much more participants that we are expecting to. We are able to set up a good number of groups, but we believe that you can do even better from the experience that we got from this first edition. And it's definitely our plan to keep doing these kinds of events. Interpol couldn't do it by itself. We definitely counted on several of our partners, some of our strategic partners and some of new partners that joined us specifically for this event. We contribute as police officers. We could input some information about how a real case works, how the officers usually investigate the crime, but of course the technical background, the setup of a cyber range, how to investigate in an entirely cyber environment using forensic tools. It's something that the private sector gave to us and also some universities who also helped.