They’d say, "An open world is a world in which all public information is open, blah blah blah."
I have emailed you.
Yes, those I’ve dealt with.
Whisky Chang?
If you know anyone in particular in g0v, I’m particularly interested in people who are civil servants who might come. It’s invite‑only in the sense, it’s got limited space. I will run it. It’s highly interactive. It is about this stuff.
It’s on Saturday, 10:00 till 5:00. Here in Taipei. Write down the time.
10:00 AM to 5:00 PM. It’s open‑leaders.com.
There’s several people from the OCF, and several others. There’s a couple of entrepreneurs. There are some people from the NTU, National Taiwan University. There’s also at least one civil servant.
Could you mail them alternatively?
That would be amazing. Could you do that today by any chance? Because it’s getting close to...
It’s not going to be a public event. Many people must be in the policy, PhD candidate, deputy CEO of the Open Culture Foundation, which is obviously... OK. Thank you so much.
I’m here until next Wednesday. Next Tuesday, Wednesday. If tere’s anything you want to follow up on let me know. This has been very, a privilege to meet you.
Lovely.
No, I said governance.
No. I’ve already got that. I think what I would say...
...there will be innovation too.
Is the stronger one.
I did write freedom, innovation, healthy and wealthy. I agree.
I think the challenge of both for us is how we go outside of the tech sphere.
Ultimately to build an open movement of the current, you need to go beyond... We need to reach out. That’s why for example, inequality seems to be quite a powerful message globally.
I suspect that it may not be here right now, but I think it will be in 20 years.
Very good to meet you. Thank you.
Real pleasure.
We’ll be back. Sylvie’s Taiwanese.
You have our email, so we can just keep emailing.
Thank you so much as well. It’s a pleasure to meet you. Maybe we’ll see you on Saturday, who knows?