 Today, four higher education IT leaders will debate Information Security's top spot placement on the 2016 EDUCAUSE Top 10 IT Issues List. Mike and David, you represent the point of view that placement as the top IT issue is not of benefit to Information Security. So I'd like to flip the usual question and ask you if there are any benefits to being the number one spot on the 2016 EDUCAUSE Top 10 IT Issues List. Joanna, it's great to be here. I believe that leadership only has so much capacity for issues to think about, spend their time worrying about. And to the degree that a top 10 list such as this one helps shape their use of this capacity, I think it's a good thing. The obvious benefit to me is it tells us more about what CIOs are thinking about. In other words, it's indicative that these security issues have sort of penetrated that fog of leadership. I would say the benefit is that if you can get a higher level of attention in other parts of information technology and in other parts of the university, because they perceive that it's an important issue, that is not a bad thing. Thank you. Sharon and Neal, you represent the point of view that placement as the top IT issue is of benefit to Information Security. Did Mike and David miss anything? I think that having Information Security be the number one issue could increase the amount of resources as Information Security professionals to come into our organizations and allow us to do our jobs a little bit better than we are currently doing. For organizations that are strapped, this is a huge benefit. From my perspective, I would say security being number one. It's in the right place because it touches so many other aspects of the issues that appear in the top 10 issues list, it touches institution data management, it touches business intelligence analytics, enterprise applications integration, so many of the other pieces and paying attention to that sort of foundational activity in security is so important. But the other things that we want to accomplish after we've dealt with as much as we can deal with in a changing and evolving security context as security concerns.