 Millicom has been working for a while with UNICEF now on understanding our impacts on children's rights in a more more proto-sense and in the past year or so we have been working on the ITU and UNICEF guidelines on implementing protections for children online which is obviously a very relevant children's rights issue when it comes to the telecommunications sector. We provide access to networks and to the internet, to a wide variety of customers. It's very important to start from a multi-stakeholder perspective and this is something that we discussed this morning at the panel. What we've been doing in Latin America now is convening workshops where we invite law enforcement, regulators, ministries, the civil society and industry, the internet service providers and then telecom operators to discuss all the different issues around child online protection and what are the most relevant ones for each of these stakeholders and what are the issues where we have to really work together to have sustainable solutions to protect children. One of the points that I think is most important to make is that education whether it's of parents, teachers or children themselves is really the only solution that will ultimately help. There can be some technological solutions to children to a specific point. Parental controls for example to protect their access to certain content but after a while children will actually know more about the online world than we do. So educating them, helping them understand what the risks are for their privacy, what kind of reputation they're actually creating for themselves online, what consequences that might have, what dangers they might be online, things to be aware of. I think education really is the key.