In the European Union, cultural industry or cultural creative industry is the field that receives the most benefits of digital technology, such as establishment and utilization of cultural heritage platform, commercial utilization through digitaliagtion of cultural heritage, and distribution of cultural goods using broadband. In particular, the digitalization and utilization of cultural heritage has a strong nature of science and technology policies that presuppose technological support, unlike traditional cultural policies such as Capital of Cultural. Therefore, the digitalization and utilization of cultural heritage is recognized as a new creative industry in the era of the 4th industrial revolution, which encompasses digital technology standardization, research and development, building clusters and network platforms in the cultural sector, and strengthening intellectual property rights. Since the digital cultural heritage program is a policy that embraces rapidly changing digital technologies, it is implemented in conjunction with the development and application of several new technologies through the European Union's science and technology policy like a Horizon 2020. As such, the digital cultural heritage program has a complex character as a group of programs in Creative Europe, which is a cultural policy conducted against the background of institutional and technical support through a digital single market and science and technology policy.