 It's just recording. Okay, yeah. So, I'm with all the trunks, the digital minister and acting the social innovation minister. So, I have a question about the open government because while the party also put the open government in the policy and I would like to know your idea about the open government and the future of democracy. Yeah, through radio and television, one person can speak to millions of people. But now for the first time, we can listen to millions of the people over the internet. Like many of you, I'm a digital migrant. 22 years ago, I moved into the internet when I was still young and dropped out of high school. But in the cyberspace, just like in the physical world, the new migrants and the natives, we have much to learn from each other. And our particular approach is through open data and through open space. Now, open data turns raw measurements into social objects so people can gather around budgets, around laws, around regulations. These become topics of discussion just like today's weather. Now, open space blends our individual feelings into shared reflections and within a reflective space, we gradually become aware of ourselves and we form a crowd that demos in the democracy. And so, transparent like a glass, reflective like a mirror, these are the two democratic properties of the future spaces. And so we are the early makers of digital democracy in the 21st century. We're like the early makers of telescopes, reflecting telescopes in the 17th century. We're full of innovations. We want to look at all the stars. But personally speaking, I think I'm very happy to learn with our international friends and making an inventory catalog of such innovations around the world. Because only through learning with each other can we truly enter an age of science and then eventually going beyond it into an age of reflection. Thank you.