 We discussed the armed citizenry earlier, and what is your principle view on that? Are you full of tight controls? I'm for each country deciding how it can keep its citizens safer, and Iceland is a good example of a country where you have a very, very law-abiding citizenry, educated population, a country where people believe in hunting and the right to bear arms for purposes of hunting, and where your crime rate with regard to guns is very, very low. So my belief is Iceland is a model country in terms of to prove that you can be armed as a citizenry, have an armed citizenry, and still have a safe country. So we can live by example or other countries and look at Iceland as an example in that matter? You can look at Iceland as an example that you can have a highly armed citizenry in relation to the population and still have a safe country. What I don't want people to do is to think that you can use the Iceland model and transplant it to another country. There are countries where they believe you should have low access to guns, and there are countries where you believe you should have high access to guns. And I believe that each country should decide for itself which it should be. We discussed the threat of cyberterrorism earlier. What is the most pressing problem that we face globally when it comes to that? The most pressing problem globally when it comes to cyber crime of any sort is that the organized crime groups are much faster. They don't have any legal barriers allowing them to, preventing them from moving from one country to another country virtually, and they're able to hit a country very quickly financially or hit citizens financially, take the money out, and the chances of finding the money afterwards is very, very low. So they move fast, lower limitations, and much more effective at achieving their ends. You met with the Prime Minister earlier. What was the topic of discussion? I'll be meeting with the Prime Minister later. What will you be discussing with him? Discussing the fact that Iceland is such an important member of Interpol, that it's a very safe country and that their police force, your police force is very, very actively engaged in screening citizens and databases to make sure that the people who come to Iceland come here with the right intentions. We have had some issues of cyber threats. One of the biggest telecommunications companies was hacked by cyber terrorists and we had some security problems at the government level as well. How do you think the Icelandic authorities are equipped in fighting cyber terrorism? I think Iceland, just like any other advanced country where you're very highly interconnected when it comes to internet access and cyber access, you're at risk, but every country, there's no country that I've visited where they have the cyber problem solved. The important point is that in order to do legitimate activity, the internet facilitates that greatly. So by limiting it too much, you hurt your ability to develop the way that you should and the vibrant economy that's coming back in Iceland needs to have a very open internet policy, which it currently has.