Record of the 2008 CPRFPlease click here to download the Record of the Communications Policy & Research Forum 2008. It is a 434-page volume containing the published papers. It is a 3.6MB PDF. These are the papers in the record:
Binary benefits: Better broadcasting & the digital dividend in the USA Keynote address by Jonathan Levy Lost in translation Keynote address by Kim Anderson Australian non-broadband households — the views of the late majority by Peter Adams Social media and concepts of content and communications regulation by Andrew Ailwood & Matt Vitins Tipping points for broadband users by Trevor Barr Regulating content in a digital world: How Australia is tackling the internet by Valeska Bloch Event modelling for policymakers & valuation analysts in disruptive innovation markets: Digital Download Strategies for Radiohead’s In Rainbows & Nine Inch Nails’ The Slip by Alex Burns Candidates’ new media use in the 2007 Australian national election by Peter Chen Older people and the internet by Pam Coutts The safe and unsafe use of mobile phone evidence by Reg Coutts & Hugh Selby Journalism as social networking: The Australian youdecide project and the 2007 Federal election by Terry Flew & Jason Wilson Looking for new answers in old methods: The independent press and the solutions they offer to the ‘crisis of content’ by Susan Forde Consumers, choice, change: The art of television by Ian Garland Regulation and business modelling in a fully converged digital environment by Duncan Giles ‘Through Country Women’: A proposal for the CWA’s role in rural connectivity by Melissa Gregg & Genevieve Bell Regional Next Generation Network initiatives by James Halliday ISP responsibility — principle, reality or pipe dream? by Cheng Lim ICT users in remote Indigenous communities by Kerry McCallum & Franco Papandrea Researching journalism and diversity in Australia: History and policy by Kerry McCallum & Julie Posetti Maintaining relevance: Cultural diversity and the case for Public Service Broadcasting by Georgie McClean Re-Sourcing school: Rethinking education in a connected world by Shilo McClean Structural separation — unlocking or destroying value? by Kevin Morgan Transforming consumer representation in Australian communications by Robert Morsillo The rise and rise of content: Challenges to the regulation of voice and content in the next generation by Matthew Nicholls ‘According to the degree of influence’: Why regional commercial radio is more heavily regulated than metropolitan commercial television by Rob Nicholls Lost in transcription: The Australian regime for interception of, and access to, communications content and metadata by Rob Nicholls & Michelle Rowland Ratings in revolution or transition? by Tom O’Regan & Mark Balnaves Sustainability requirements in information & communications technology by Christopher Pavlovski & Joe Zou The importance of measurements of online video audiences to determine communication policy by Silvia Pfeiffer New technology, the ‘control crisis’, and government intervention: Lessons from telegraphy in the 1870s by Peter Putnis Changing journalism for the likely present by Stephen Quinn Indefeasible rights of use amidst the capacity boom by Linh Tran
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