With September’s bustling and future focussed IBC2023 in the bag, the international broadcast and technology bodies that own IBC fill us in on their 2023 accomplishments, insights and hopes for the industry in the coming year.
Central themes include AI and ethics, 5G for content workflows, cybersecurity, skills shortages, advancements in VP and the rise of data, all of which point to 2024 being a big year for broadcast tech.
AI and ML Leading the Content Journey
IEEE, the Broadcast Technology Society commented on the industry trends that continually change our landscape, and how they will bring challenges and new technologies...
You are not signed in
Only registered users can read the rest of this article.

Esports World Cup plans biggest video game tournament ever staged
Returning to Riyadh this month for its second outing, the Esports World Cup is being billed as the most ambitious and technologically advanced global competitive event in history.
.jpg)
The Lobby: Levelling the playing field in esports
With diversity, equity and inclusion at its core, Guild Esports has continued to build on its community-focused programmes, helping to create a welcoming and respectful environment for all gamers. Ivan Simic reports.

Content Everywhere: Accelerating towards IBC2025
Content Everywhere companies are already in planning mode for this year’s IBC, which takes places as usual at RAI Amsterdam in September. Some will also have been working on, or at least taking note of, projects included in the event’s Accelerator Programme, the 2025 iteration of which began last October with a call for challenges, followed by Kickstart Day in February.

Sheffield DocFest: Panellists scold media for succumbing to ‘climate of fear’
Investigative documentary filmmakers take broadcasters and streamers to task for being complicit in the rise of authoritarianism and muzzling the Palestinian experience in Gaza.

Machine burning: Is it high time for a global AI energy regulator?
AI is the new secret sauce that every CTO is being pressed to bring on board, helping to supercharge every part of the business, from automating admin to amplifying creativity. But what is the underlying cost to the environment? Neal Romanek reports.