 Welcome back to the AI for Good Global Summit here in Geneva, but of course at the ITU headquarters. And I'm joined now by Kriti Sharma, who's the Vice President of Artificial Intelligence at the SAGE Foundation. So Kriti, you're one of the younger members who've come and sat here. Why is a young person like yourself here? It's really important for people from all backgrounds, especially young people, to be part of not just consuming AI technology, but building it and creating what our future looks like. And this is why I would love to see even next year even more young people and even potentially a youth track where young people come in and show what they've built. I've had a bit of experience working in AI since I was a teenager really. I used to build my own machines, my own robots, my own computers, and I think it really helped me develop my technical skills, take out all the fear, and now I'm solving big global challenges using AI. What are the challenges that the UN has a lot of sustainable development goals? What's the link with what you're doing? A couple of areas I would like to focus on. One is what AI means towards women and equality, gender-based violence, abuse, harassment, these words that we're just recently starting to hear more about with the Me Too movement. But taking it a step further using AI to solve it, which is really interesting, using data-driven decision-ink to define policymaking and education, which is an area where I focus a lot of my time on. How do we create, make education of today ready for the future of tomorrow? A lot of young people growing up today will be doing jobs that don't exist yet. Indeed, a big area and foundation at yours is trust in AI. Are young people, as I say, used to use social media and big data being used publicly? Is that a concern for young people or not? We talk to them, a lot of them, we do a big research survey. What we learned is one in four young people are interested in AI in the future of AI and the rest of them have quite skeptical views, which we are able to turn around. The top three reasons that they give us about their skepticism towards AI, number one, they think it's not very inclusive because they feel like you've got to be a rocket scientist to be a participant in the AI movement, which I believe is kind of sad. I need to do something about it. Number two, they think it's not creative. It's probably just somebody sitting on a computer writing a quote all day, which again, as you've seen at this event, it's absolutely not the case. And number three, that the schools in the education system is not giving them the skills they need. So to our viewers, you built a robot. What are you going to build next? I'm going to tell you what my first robot did and that would give you some context. It solved a very important problem for the world, which was to fetch Snickers chocolate from the snack bar at 3 p.m. every day. But more importantly, it taught me how machines learn on their own and make autonomous decisions. And now I use a built robot to automate mundane tasks and make humans life more productive and convenient and also solving problems that humans can't. For instance, the project we are doing, building a bot in South Africa for women facing abuse, it's really interesting when they say they find it more convenient to talk to a machine about these very personal matters than to other humans because machines don't judge you, humans do. Kristi Sharma from the Lease Sage Foundation, thanks very much. Thank you. Looking forward to your next project. Thank you.