 Today at Entrepreneur, we have with us Mr. Sanjeev Bhikchandani, founder of InfoEdge. Mr Bhikchandani, thank you for talking to Entrepreneur India today. And Mr Bhikchandani, the recent Google Fiasco which just happened, we saw one of your teats talking about how Indian, it's the need of the hour for Indian app stores to come up and we heard that phone pay is now coming up for this own app store. Indus app, yes. Yes. So, do you think Indian startups can solve this problem or the government needs to intervene? I think it probably has to be a combination of both eventually. Look, I have nothing against Google. I do believe 96% market share is a bit of vulnerability and excessive dependency and I think strategically that needs to go down over time. And other than that, we are in conversation with Google, we have good relations and our apps are back on the app store. Okay. But can we expect a group like yours to come up with such an idea of a play store? Well, we haven't taken it forward yet, but it will be very interesting to see how the Indus app store, how that develops. Okay. Okay. And today at startup Mahakum, when you are seeing various startups coming together and when you relate it with your journey, I mean, what are your comments on the Indian ecosystem? We are seeing it here. It's very vibrant. You know, there are 1000 startups here, more than 1000 investors are coming, all the policy makers are here, more than 500 incubators are here, 23 or 26 states are participating. I think clearly the startup ecosystem is thriving. But at this point in time, do we also need to highlight the kind of failures an entrepreneur goes through? Because at times, many startup founders just get attracted to the kind of fancy, vibrant ecosystem and the kind of celebrity status today's founders are achieving. But yes, there is a survivorship bias. We tend to look at the successes more than the failures. But that's a bit like the like Bollywood, right? A thousand people try to become a hero, maybe try to make it. But that's life, unfortunately Darwinian. And yes, you're right. It is important to understand the risks before we get in. Thank you. Thank you.