 Hi, my name is Duncan McShig. I'm a PhD student in Trinity College in Dublin. I started as a law student, got dragged into the internet direction and now I'm hanging around for this conference for a couple of days. I mean, I'd like to say that, you know, this sort of stuff is the future of the internet actually, you know, thinking about it, talking about it, bringing people together from different backgrounds, not just the lawyers, not just the geeks, not just the geek lawyers or the lawyer geeks, not just the Americans, but you know, it's a, I think the future of the internet is really more connected to the future of what we're doing as nations and as societies and as activists more generally. I think it's a case of taking the internet out of its little corner and saying that the decisions we make over something like net neutrality, media regulation, privacy, relations with the developing world, relations with China, that sort of thing. There are questions that we're asking at this conference, but there are also questions that are of interest to people who've never gone to an internet studies conference or never got involved in internet or anything because these are fundamental questions and answering them I think is what we're here to do.