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The Age of Digital Convergence in Hong Kong

Just a quick note. I am fortunate to be in Hong Kong at The Age of Digital Convergence, An East-West Dialogue Law, Media, Technology. The Journalism and Media Studies Centre at The University of Hong Kong and Intellectual Property Law Center at Drake University Law School organized the event and the Faculty of Law at The University of Hong Kong and Technology & Entertainment Law Program at Vanderbilt University Law School co-sponsored.

The conference aims to address a range of questions:

What does it mean when people are born or have grown up digital? How do different forms of media interact with each other in an increasingly convergent environment? What type of legal, social and cultural challenges have arisen when people actively participate in the information age? Has the digital lifestyle paved the way for the development of new business models, social relationships and government regulation? Do we need to rethink some of our real-world assumptions when we talk about the Net Generation? Should traditional concepts, such as privacy, identity, free speech and journalism, be reconceptualized in cyberspace?

The panels include Digital Natives, Social Networks and the Virtual World; Content Control, Indecency and Pornography; Journalism in the Age of Convergence; New Media, Sociocultural Issues and Emerging Developments; Content Delivery, Multimedia Platforms and New Prosumers; Privacy, Identity and Brandjacking; Creativity 2.0, Technolegal Fixes and Copyright Reform; and Closing Address: “Hong Kong–Creative Capital in Asia”. The panelists have come from all over the world and several disciplines. Hearing so many different views and learning about some East Asian perspective on intellectual property and privacy has been quite stimulating. Last, I want to thank Peter Yu for inviting me to participate and as always being an excellent host.