Thank you.
For 40 or 50 years, technology has continued to generate machines that provide more and more information to people. If I think back to 3,000 years ago, in Athens they had the Acropolis. All the citizens would arrive at the Acropolis and discuss issues and pass judgment, etc. But as populations got bigger and more organized, we went into silos and categories, etc.
Nowadays, we have trillions and trillions of pieces of information that citizens can't get at. I'm looking at the trend lines of what's going on here, and it seems to me that if open data actually becomes open data throughout this country and other countries, we'll be moving back towards the Acropolis again. That will affect governments, the organizations of governments, etc.
For your final thoughts, I wonder whether you have any opinions on how open data is going to affect governments.
I'll start with Ms. Miller and run the other way.