<h1>Media regulation and the media revolution</h1>10<sup><small>th</small></sup> November 2005<h2 xmlns:accc="http://www.accc.gov.au/xmlns/accc">Conference</h2><span class="contentacccSpeech">Australian Communications and Media Authority 
1st Annual Conference</span><h2 xmlns:accc="http://www.accc.gov.au/xmlns/accc">Summary</h2>We are on the cusp of yet another revolution as big as the one that ushered in the television age, with technological change and convergence again set to alter the way consumers access sport, news, information and entertainment. So is the technology making many of our existing concerns about media regulation irrelevant? This is the question that will need to be addressed by policy makers and regulators as we face the inexorable impact of new technology on consumer demands and preferences.<h2 xmlns:accc="http://www.accc.gov.au/xmlns/accc">Attachments</h2><p xmlns:accc="http://www.accc.gov.au/xmlns/accc"><span id="synopFileid781875464233"><img src="/ui/images/mediaTypeIcons/pdf.gif"/> <a href="/content/item.phtml?itemId=713959&amp;nodeId=46345e11cff0892258d2bacf451cbca3&amp;fn=20051110%20ACMA.pdf">Media regulation and the media revolution</a> (80.9 KB)</span><br><span class="contentacccSpeech"></span></p><h2 xmlns:accc="http://www.accc.gov.au/xmlns/accc">Speakers</h2><ul xmlns:accc="http://www.accc.gov.au/xmlns/accc"><li><div><a href="/content/index.phtml/itemId/321587">Mr Graeme Samuel, Chairman</a></div><div></div></li></ul>