利樹培梁蕙卿 傑出學人傳媒講座
史丹福大學法律系Lawrence Lessig教授主講
程序
- 開幕致辭:陳婉瑩教授,香港大學新聞及傳播研究中心總監
- 主題講座:史坦福大學法律系Lawrence Lessig教授
- 論壇-主持:麥康瑞女士、嘉賓:Lawrence Lessig教授、伊藤穰一先生、余家明教授
- 答問時間
視訊串流
blip.tv (數碼港資訊源中心版本)
Youtube (網炫版本)
下載錄影檔 (數碼港資訊源中心版本)
WMV (微軟專利格式) 連結至數碼港資訊源中心
Ogg Vorbis (無專利自由格式) 第一段落, 第二段落
現場錄音
香港移動電台 (連結至第一段落, 第二段落和第三段落下載頁)
About Lee Shu Pui Leung Wai Hing Distinguished Lecture in Digital Media
The Lee Shu Pui Leung Wai Hing Distinguished Lecture in Digital Media was set up through the generous donation made by Mr. Lee Kam Woon and Mrs. Lee Shum Shuk Yuen (BA 1953) to the Journalism and Media Studies Centre (JMSC), in honor of Mr. Lee’s late parents. This endowment fund in support of an annual lecture in digital media will be used to invite a visionary leader and thinker to address critical issues confronting the media in the age of revolutionary change. These lectures will bring together academics, industry practitioners, and community members in a common pursuit for the enhancement of the media and the public life of Hong Kong.
About Professor Lawrence Lessig
Professor Lessig is the world’s foremost authority on copyright and intellectual property issues, a visionary seeking to reconcile creative freedom with marketplace competition. A leading authority on cyber law, he has focused his scholarship on the problem of how law should govern the exchange of information and ideas in a digital age. He is also a strong advocate of social institutions that would unleash the creative impulses at all levels of society. Professor Lessig is the founder and co-director of Stanford law school’s Center for Internet and Society, founder of the Creative Commons project, and a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He has taught at University of Chicago Law School and Harvard Law School. After completing his legal studies, Professor Lessig clerked for Justice Antonin Scalia, of the U.S. Supreme Court and Judge Richard Posner of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit. Professor Lessig is the author of Free Culture (2004), The Future of Ideas (2001), Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace (1999) and Code 2.0 (2006). He serves on the boards of Creative Commons, the Free Software Foundation, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the Public Library of Science, and Public Knowledge. He is also a columnist for Wired. His website can be found at Lessig.org.
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About Mr Joichi Ito
Mr. Ito is a co-founder and board member of Digital Garage (http://www.garage.co.jp/) and the CEO of Neoteny (http://www.neoteny.com). He is the CEO of Creative Commons (http://www.creativecommons.org). He is on the board of Technorati (http://www.technorati.com/) and helps run Technorati Japan (http://www.technorati.jp/). He is the Chairman of Six Apart Japan (http://www.sixapart.jp/) the weblog software company. He is the board of a number of non-profit organizations including The Mozilla Foundation and WITNESS (http://www.witness.org/). He has created numerous Internet companies including PSINet Japan, Digital Garage and Infoseek Japan. He has served and continues to serve on numerous Japanese central as well as local government committees and boards, advising the government on IT, privacy and computer security related issues. He is currently researching “The Sharing Economy” as a Doctor of Business Administration candidate at the Graduate School of International Corporate Strategy at Hitotsubashi University in Japan. He maintains a weblog (http://joi.ito.com/) where he regularly shares his thoughts with the online community. He is the Guild Custodian of the World of Warcraft guild, We Know (http://weknow.to/).
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About Professor Peter Yu
Professor Yu holds the Kern Family Chair in Intellectual Property Law and is the founding director of the Intellectual Property Law Center at Drake University Law School. He is also a Wenlan Scholar Chair Professor at Zhongnan University of Economics and Law in Wuhan, China. In the summer, he serves as Visiting Professor of Law at the University of Hong Kong Faculty of Law. Before joining Drake University, he founded the nationally-renowned Intellectual Property & Communications Law Program at Michigan State University, at which he held faculty appointments in law, communication arts and sciences, and Asian studies. Born and raised in Hong Kong, Professor Yu is a leading expert in international intellectual property and communications law. A prolific scholar and an award-winning teacher, he is the author or editor of three books and more than 50 law review articles and book chapters. His publications are available on his website at http://www.peteryu.com.
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About Professor Yuen-ying Chan
Professor Chan, an award-winning journalist and Hong Kong native, established The University of Hong Kong’s Journalism and Media Studies Centre in September 1999. She set up the first professional postgraduate journalism programme in Hong Kong, launched Hong Kong’s first fellowships for working journalists, and forged extensive ties between HKU and the news industry. Her honours include a Nieman Fellowship at Harvard University, a George Polk Award for journalistic excellence and an International Press Freedom Award by the Committee to Protect Journalists. She taught at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism and was on the board of the Asian American Journalists Association. Professor Chan has a bachelor’s degree (social sciences) from HKU and a Masters from the Chinese University of Hong Kong.
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About Ms. Rebecca MacKinnon
Ms. MacKinnon, an assistant professor at The University of Hong Kong’s Journalism and Media Studies Centre, is a veteran journalist, China hand, and online media pioneer who currently leads JMSC’s online journalism programme. Her research interests include the Chinese Internet, free expression and corporate responsibility. She also serves as Public Lead for the Creative Commons Hong Kong project, in collaboration with Yahong Li and Alice Lee at the University of Hong Kong’s Faculty of Law. She maintains an active blog at www.RConversation.com. Before coming to Hong Kong MacKinnon was a Research Fellow at Harvard Law School’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society, where she co-founded Global Voices, a global citizens’ media network. Fluent in Mandarin Chinese, MacKinnon worked for CNN in Northeast Asia for over a decade, serving as CNN’s Beijing Bureau Chief and Correspondent from 1998-2001 and as CNN’s Tokyo Bureau Chief and Correspondent from 2001-03. She has also covered major news events in North and South Korea, Pakistan, and the Philippines. MacKinnon began her Asian journalism career in Taiwan, where she spent a year as a Fullbright scholar and freelanced for many publications, including Newsweek. She is originally from Tempe, Arizona, and a graduate of Harvard.
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授權條款
數碼港資訊源中心製作的影片以共享創意署名-非商業性3.0授權條款釋出。
網炫製作的影片以共享創意署名-非商業性-禁止衍生3.0授權條款釋出。
香港移動電台製作的錄音以共享創意署名-非商業性-禁止衍生3.0授權條款釋出。



