 We are today at the Global Launch of the Inventor Assistant Program. This is a program that has been launched in a pilot phase in three countries, Colombia, Morocco and the Philippines. We give importance to the capital, the material capital and the inventions that require a follow-up, of course, from the professional part, and this program brings this follow-up, which is a very important milestone in the innovation chain in Morocco. The main aim of the program is to help under-resourced inventors all around the world to get legal advice and technical advice to navigate the patent system. And it relies on pro bono, free assistance on the part of lawyers throughout the world or patent attorneys who assist inventors. As a lawyer that became the first pro bono lawyer in patent matters in Colombia, for us, has been a great experience. For the first time, we are in contact with very, very creative people around our country and helping them to protect their innovations, their creations. Among the sponsors we have international organizations. We have corporate sponsors like Novartis and Qualcon and we have all the key players, for example, the Federal Secret Bar Association and the Latin American Patent Attorney Association. WIPO as the cleaning house, main role is to match pro bono, patent attorneys with inventors under-resourced that have been selected country by country and we put them together in order to provide the advice and the relationship in between these two directly. Around a dozen of inventors have been selected and had access to the programs. We have around 50 patent attorneys registered and they are very operative. The role of the World Economic Forum is key since the beginning of the program and still today. We are at an important stage of this undertaking which is moving from that kind of conceptual phase to a model that can be implemented. I think today is an extremely important milestone in that regard. This program is about sending a message to countries. It's about sending a message to leadership. It's about sending a message to those who fund innovation that innovation is important, that there are people in your country who are making really great innovations that are so great in fact that they can travel through the patent system and be given official legal protection. It's about opportunity and creating economic opportunity and societal opportunity for people who have great ideas and just don't happen to have huge financial resources. There is no better time than today for expanding intellectual property systems to serve new inventors to grow worldwide innovation. The IAP does not merely provide people, provide help to inventors. It empowers them to leverage their own talents. It's my hope that the expansion of the IAP will create similar results around the world and give many inventors the recognition they deserve for their hard work. Well my hope is that this program will eventually be global in scope, will serve innovators in all countries and will ensure that in the patent system there is no invention left behind. We would like to see it spread to other countries so that there is a genuine support system for inventors and small and medium enterprises in the intellectual property system throughout the whole world.