 It's been a busy week at the International Telecommunication Union in Geneva. This has been the scene of the 2014 WSIS Plus 10 high-level event. The high-level track has been a resounding success with the approval of two important documents that will frame the future development of the process. The issue we're dealing with are technical issues and this is why we're able to reach this kind of common agreement without ideological fights, without political fights, and that's the true spirit of ITU. So I'm really very pleased with the results. We've been able to put a roadmap for the future. We've agreed on some of the key issues that would normally be divisive in other camps and people can be emotional about them. But we need to debate those issues with real belief in what we want to achieve together. We have cross-fertilization of minds, of positions. From friction comes light, most of the time, and we've been able to prove that again. We've been able to find common denominators. You know, we humans have so many things in common. We tend to fight sometimes over our little differences, but when we sit around the table, we're able to cut some really good deals and I think everybody is going out of this forum equally happy. The forum track has once again demonstrated the effectiveness of WISIS in bringing together multiple stakeholders from the private sector, international bodies and civil society. Next year marks the 10th anniversary of the Tunis Declaration and the various participants will have to decide what form their future collaboration will take. We need to speak about the developmental aspect of use of ICTs, but equally we need to speak about freedom of expression because we certainly see that with the evolution of technology there is increasing attempts to impose limitations to the free flow of information and freedom of expression online. Information technology is changing rapidly and this is the technology that all the governments and all the people and private sectors are involved in. My desire is somehow we should have some kind of regulation and policy that everybody and all countries enjoying this technology. I think that the conference has really to be an integrative moment. So a moment where all these new challenges related to technologies but also related to information society as such. I'm thinking for instance of the internet challenge. All these questions have to be integrated in a single approach and we have to be able to develop an agenda which will allow us for the future to really develop something making a lot of sense for the worldwide community. For me it's important to have a good view of what has been achieved, a clear view but more importantly already a plan to continue because I'm pretty sure that we haven't achieved everything that we wanted to achieve so therefore it's very important to have a good plan of action, concrete proposals to continue in the next 10 years to make sure that even if we haven't managed 2015 we will manage in the next 5 to 10 years to accomplish what we wanted to do. Jaroslav Ponder is one of the senior organizers of this event and of course next year you're going to be there. What can we look forward to then? Yes, next year is very particular because this is the year of the Sustainable Development Goals, this is the year of the overall review and that's why we are hoping to welcome all stakeholders here in Geneva and to find the commitment towards the reinforced implementations that are achieving the goals and the targets for the vision beyond 2015. Thank you very much. We hope you'll join us again for next year's event and in the meantime don't forget you can keep up to date with the ITU's activities by subscribing to the YouTube channel.