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Formula 1 fans have been promised "exciting" developments in digital media in 2018 by Ross Brawn.

Liberty Media has spent its first year as F1's owner analysing its strengths and weaknesses are, and working out what it can do to improve matters in 2018.

One focus has been ramping up efforts on digital platforms, an area that former F1 supremo Bernie Ecclestone had neglected because he did not see much profit potential in it.

F1 managing director of motorsport Brawn said ahead of the season finale in Abu Dhabi that Liberty is close to finalising exactly what it will do next year and expects fans to be pleased.

"Quite frankly F1 is almost a start-up, because there had been so little done on the digital and social media front, and the way the content of F1 was presented, so for us it really had been a fresh start," said Brawn, during an appearance at the F1 Connectivity Innovation Prize Finale at the Yas Marina.

"That is good and bad. It is good because we have got an opportunity to create what we need going forward for the future, bad because there was nothing there to build on.

"But there are some really exciting things that people are going to start seeing next year, in this arena, of how information is presented."

F1 commercial chief Sean Bratches has already confirmed that there are plans for a live streaming OTT product in certain markets, but Brawn suggests changes will be made for fans at the track too.

Working with F1 communications partner Tata, one idea is for fans to have access to a high speed wifi network - which will then allow them to better understand what is taking place on track.

Brawn added: "F1 is so content rich, there is so much data, so much information, that we can layer it at whatever level the fan or the enthusiast wants to engage, and what we want is for the casual fan to start to understand how rich is the content of F1 going into it.

"We are looking at how we communicate with the fans within a race so that we can again provide all those extra layers of information. There are some new initiatives that will come out next year.

"Most people have got a mobile phone or an iPad or some sort of device. If we can add that extra information, so that the guys in the grandstand as well as watching the real track action know what is going on with the race strategy, know what is going on with the tyres, know what is going with perhaps deeper information, getting the audio from all the cars and listening to the drivers then that will be a great step.

"We need to introduce a system for the fans. It is a big task, it is a fairly massive task and we are just looking at how we best introduce it."