Central News (Central News Agency, Reporter Wang Hsin-yu, Taipei, July 3) Public Television Service (PTS) today held an international symposium to mark the 20th anniversary of the Public Television Service Foundation (PTS Foundation), inviting media professionals from Japan, South Korea, and other countries to discuss the responsibilities of public media. Hu Yuan-hui, Chairman of the PTS Foundation, expressed his hope that the foundation would build a "spiritual mountain" that unites public values for Taiwan. Hu Yuan-hui reviewed the journey of the PTS Foundation from 2006 to the present, emphasizing that public media serves citizens, not consumers. It should focus on universality and public participation, rather than solely pursuing ratings or revenue. "How to enable the public to participate through media and become a social citizen is what public media is constantly thinking about." Hu Yuan-hui hopes that the PTS Foundation will evolve from a benchmark role to one that catalyzes social change and builds a mature democratic society. "Beyond the 'technological mountain,' let the PTS Foundation build a spiritual mountain that unites public values for Taiwan." Masashi Kitajima, Deputy General Manager of NHK Media Innovation Center, presented examples such as the "NHK Hiroshima Broadcasting Station IP Core Studio" and the marathon broadcast of the "National Men's Ekiden." He explained how IP remote production reduces on-site personnel and shared that technological transformation requires synchronized upgrades of both software and hardware to maintain the competitiveness of public media in the digital age. Lee In-koo, CEO of the South Korean tech company EQ4ALL, shared the social impact of AI sign language technology in South Korea. He pointed out that the company uses large language models (LLMs) to drive its sign language translation engine and has established datasets specifically designed for deaf children's education and public transportation. "The original intent