Sponsors

Join Europe’s most influential satellite figures at the prestigious Copenhagen Business School for the UNESCO supported European Satellite Cultures Conference in May, 2006. It is a conference which has been specifically arranged to provide an opportunity for the telecommunications industry, policy makers, journalists, academics and civil society to confront the key challenges that Europe faces in the digital age.
It is your opportunity to share in the experiences and concerns of the media industry’s primary stakeholders and to contribute to the debate on European media policies in the light of globalization and the imminent digitalization.
As a sponsor, it is also an occasion to reaffirm your dominance in the telecommunications industry and to enjoy the corporate branding associated with such a high calibre event in a forum of your core target audience.
Read more about 
 for the European Satellite Cultures Conference or download your
 and
 (pdf)
For questions and concerns of any kind, please do not hesitate to contact Conference Manager Julie Uldam, esc@cbs.dk.
  • Prepare for the European broadcasting digitalization. Who will be winners and who will be losers?

  • Hear about the priorities in regulation of the digital economy

  • Get updated on new policy initiatives and how they are going to affect the satellite industry in Europe

  • Find out about the consequences of digital broadcasting for media industry and consumers.

  • Learn about the socio-cultural benefits and dangers of global satellite infrastructures and how these are considered in policy making.

  • Discover the factors underlying the problem of universal access to better understand how this may be anticipated.

  • What are the problems and solutions to national content regulation?

  • Investigate how a competitive market may be maintained while citizens’ interests are at the same time protected?

  • Share your concerns with other actors in the satellite industry and contribute to the debate on future media policy in Europe


 
 

Sidst opdateret af Anders Krag 23.11.2005