---
title: "The School Is Not a Bystander: Three Model Cases on Schools' Duties in Minors' Online Protection"
author: "DCC Editorial"
published: 2026-07-15T10:00:00.000Z
url: https://datacompliancechina.com/posts/schools-role-minors-online-protection/
description: "Minors' online protection is usually framed as a job for parents and platforms. Three model cases — a Guangzhou Internet Court judgment on defamation in a parent–school WeChat group, a Supreme People's Procuratorate case where procuratorial recommendations pushed a school to build bullying-control systems after a privacy video spread, and a Zhejiang case where a predator used an unauthorized school-named 'confession wall' account to reach students — show Chinese courts and procuratorates deliberately pulling schools into the frame. JunHe's education team distills the school's three statutory functions: internet-literacy education (Minors Protection Law Arts. 64 and 70, Online Protection Regulations Art. 16), cyberbullying prevention and response (Minors Protection Law Art. 39; School Protection Provisions Art. 21), and internet-addiction intervention (Minors Protection Law Art. 71; Regulations Art. 40). The liability stack for schools that do nothing: administrative correction orders and sanctions under Regulations Art. 51, plus civil supplementary liability under Civil Code Art. 1201. Four recommendations follow: documented literacy and AI-content-discrimination education, a staffed-up 'rule-of-law vice principal' mechanism, a full discover–stop–report–handle bullying protocol, and compliance with device-management and anti-addiction requirements. With 196 million minor netizens at 97.3% penetration, the authors argue schools are the 'main battlefield' whether they like it or not."
tags: ["minors-protection", "cyberbullying", "privacy", "reputation", "internet-court", "procuratorial-recommendation", "schools", "internet-addiction", "compliance"]
laws_cited: ["minors-protection-law", "minors-online-protection-regulations", "minors-school-protection-provisions", "civil-code-personal-info"]
domains: ["minors-protection", "personal-information", "enforcement"]
account: "junhe-legal-review"
original_title: "君合法评丨未成年人网络保护进行时——从典型案例看学校的网络保护职能"
original_author: "余苏 (Yu Su), 张美怡 (Zhang Meiyi), 潘扬璋 (Pan Yangzhang), JunHe LLP"
original_publication: "君合法律评论 (JunHe Legal Review) WeChat Official Account"
original_url: "https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/jvq2lSjDsfMRpIT-DqqWjA"
source_language: "zh"
---

> **Source: Data Compliance China** — https://datacompliancechina.com/posts/schools-role-minors-online-protection/ · China data law, translated and annotated for overseas counsel. Cite as: Data Compliance China, "The School Is Not a Bystander: Three Model Cases on Schools' Duties in Minors' Online Protection", https://datacompliancechina.com/posts/schools-role-minors-online-protection/
> *Editor's Note — DCC.*
>
> DCC's minors-protection coverage has mostly tracked the platform side —
> most recently the minors'-mode duties under the
> [AI anthropomorphic interaction rules](/posts/anthropomorphic-ai-measures-take-effect-field-guide/).
> This JunHe piece (published July 9, 2026) shows the other enforcement
> surface: courts and procuratorates using model cases, judicial letters, and
> procuratorial recommendations (检察建议) to make *schools* an operational
> node of the [Regulations on the Protection of Minors in Cyberspace](/laws/minors-online-protection-regulations/).
> Relevant reading for edtech providers, international schools, and anyone
> whose product or institution touches Chinese students: the duties described
> here are what regulators expect schools to demand of their vendors and
> partners.

In many people's minds, guiding minors to use the internet sensibly is a job
for parents and platforms, with no direct connection to schools. The reality
is that cyberspace is deeply interwoven with campus life, and the resulting
problems force a rethink. When abusive remarks appear in a home–school
WeChat group set up in the school's or a class's name, does the school have a
management duty? When someone spreads a student's private video and personal
information online and incites abusive pile-ons that seriously damage the
student's physical and mental health, what should the school do? When
school-related "confession wall" (表白墙) social accounts publish content
harmful to students, can the school still stand aside? These practical
dilemmas keep interrogating the school's function and position in minors'
online protection.

Since the 2020 revision of the Law on the Protection of Minors first added a
dedicated "Network Protection" chapter, the legislative level has been
explicit about both the importance of minors' online protection and the
school's systematic responsibilities. On March 12 this year, the Fourth
Session of the Fourteenth NPC adopted the Outline of the 15th Five-Year Plan,
which expressly calls for "strengthening the online protection of minors."
Around this year's June 1 Children's Day, the Beijing Internet Court released
its White Paper on Judicial Protection of Minors Online (2021–2026) (May 28,
2026): minors-related online disputes accepted by that court surged from 50
cases in 2021 to 997 in 2025 — a nearly twenty-fold increase. The same day,
the Guangzhou Internet Court held a press conference releasing ten model
cases on judicial protection of minors online. National and local courts and
procuratorates, in other words, are using model cases to steer schools toward
an active role. The authors analyze what these cases say about the school's
functions, duties, and liability.

## I. Three model cases

### Case 1 — Defamation in the parent group; court and school jointly contain the spread

*Guangzhou Internet Court model case (released May 28, 2026): Li v. Huang,
online tort liability.*¹

Sixteen-year-old Li had a conflict with classmate Zhao. Zhao's mother, Huang,
posted insulting remarks about Li in the parents' WeChat group, accusing Li
of theft. Li's school life was severely affected; unable to bear classmates'
gossip, Li was diagnosed with moderate depression and mania. Li sued,
seeking an immediate end to the infringement, a public apology, and damages
for emotional harm.

The Guangzhou Internet Court held that Huang — without verification by the
school, public security, or any other authority — had published insulting and
defamatory statements about a minor in the parent group, infringing Li's
right to reputation. It ordered Huang to cease the infringement, apologize,
and pay RMB 10,000 in emotional-distress damages and reasonable expenses. The
judgment is final.

The court did not stop at the judgment: through written letters it proactively
engaged the school, assessed the psychological state and schoolwork of both
Li and Zhao, and worked with the school to strictly control the spread of the
abusive remarks on campus — minimizing secondary harm and heading off
knock-on effects inside the school.

### Case 2 — A privacy video spreads; procuratorial recommendations push the school to build systems

*Supreme People's Procuratorate model case on comprehensive performance of
duties in minors' online protection: the Feng privacy case.*²

From October to November 2020, the minor Zou covertly filmed a private video
of classmate Feng and sent it to others. Another student, Xiang, demanded the
video from Zou and harassed Feng through a chat app. The video and the
attendant commentary spread to Feng's school, severely affecting Feng's
studies and life.

The Shangcheng District People's Procuratorate in Hangzhou, Zhejiang,
supported Feng and Feng's guardian in filing a privacy-infringement suit and
helped assemble key evidence. The court granted all claims, ordering Zou to
cease the infringement, apologize in writing, and pay emotional-distress
damages.

Afterwards the procuratorate visited the school repeatedly and issued
procuratorial recommendations (检察建议) helping it establish
bullying-prevention-and-control systems. The school disciplined the students
who had committed bullying and privacy infringement under its rules, and used
spread-control and privacy-protection measures to minimize the incident's
impact on Feng.

### Case 3 — Unauthorized school-named "confession wall" accounts; CAC office ordered to clean up

*Zhejiang Provincial People's Procuratorate model case: supervising the
regulation of campus "confession wall" accounts.*³

In March 2023, the Longquan City People's Procuratorate discovered in a
criminal case that the suspect Ji had used information posted on a WeChat
"confession wall" account named after a local middle school to add multiple
enrolled students as friends, arranged offline meetings, and sexually
assaulted one girl. Investigation revealed that all seven urban middle
schools had unauthorized school-named "confession wall" accounts, publishing
dating-related personal information as well as harmful content — abuse of
others, e-cigarette and tattoo advertising.

In May 2023 the procuratorate issued a pre-litigation procuratorial
recommendation to the Longquan cyberspace affairs office proposing a special
clean-up. The office conducted regulatory interviews (约谈) with the
operators of the seven school-named accounts and imposed discipline,
cancelled the accounts, had each school's Youth League committee open
official accounts for student exchange instead, and established
account-management rules governing content publication and day-to-day
operation.

## II. The school's three functions in minors' online protection

Reading the Law on the Protection of Minors, the Regulations on the
Protection of Minors in Cyberspace, and the Provisions on the Protection of
Minors by Schools together, the school's functions fall into three core
dimensions.

### 1. Internet-literacy education

The school is the main front for minors' internet-literacy education,
bearing first-line responsibility for cultivating students' ability to use
the internet scientifically, civilly, safely, and reasonably. Article 64 of
the Law on the Protection of Minors requires the state, society, schools,
and families to strengthen internet-literacy education. Article 16 of the
Regulations details the school's part: literacy content goes into teaching
activities; the internet is used reasonably in instruction; students are
helped to form good online habits, build awareness of network security and
network rule of law, and strengthen their ability to obtain and critically
judge online information. In Case 3, for instance, the school had a duty to
guide school-related channels to speak reasonably and compliantly, to forbid
unauthorized individuals from publishing harmful content in the school's
name, and to guide students toward sound online habits.

Note also Article 70 of the Law: schools shall use the internet reasonably in
teaching, and minor students may not bring smartphones or other smart
terminals into class without school permission — devices brought to school
are subject to unified management. That statutory device-management duty is
itself an expression of the law's expectation that schools cultivate healthy
internet habits.

### 2. Preventing and handling cyberbullying

The internet is a hotbed of rumor, and online rumors spreading across online
and offline layers can easily injure minors whose minds are still maturing.
Article 21 of the School Protection Provisions imposes a prompt-intervention
duty: teachers and staff who discover a student "fabricating facts to defame
others, spreading rumors or false information to disparage others, or
maliciously disseminating others' privacy through networks or other
information-dissemination means" must stop it promptly. For false and
insulting information targeting a minor, as in Case 1, the school must take
effective measures to stop further spread — containing the rumor while
shielding the minor from psychological harm.

Article 39 of the Law goes further: schools must establish a student-bullying
prevention-and-control system, train staff and students, immediately stop
bullying, involve the parents or guardians of both the bullying and bullied
students in determining and handling the incident — and must not conceal
serious bullying, which must be reported promptly to public security and
education authorities. The procuratorial recommendations in Case 2, pushing
the school to build exactly such systems, are that duty made visible.

### 3. Preventing and addressing internet addiction

The internet is meaningfully addictive for minors, and the school — the actor
best placed to notice attention problems caused by addiction — carries
statutory reminder-and-education duties. Article 71 of the Law: a school that
discovers a minor student addicted to the internet shall promptly inform the
parents or other guardians and jointly educate and guide the student back to
normal study and life. To catch problems early, Article 40 of the Regulations
requires schools to strengthen teacher guidance and training, improving
teachers' capacity for early identification of and intervention in student
internet addiction.

## III. Liability, and four recommendations

What if a school fails these duties? Under Article 51 of the Regulations, a
school that does not perform its minors' online-protection duties is ordered
to correct by the education authorities; where it refuses or the
circumstances are serious, responsible leaders and directly responsible
personnel face sanctions. Beyond administrative liability, Article 1201 of
the Civil Code provides that where a student suffers personal injury at
school from a third party (such as another student), the third party bears
tort liability — and the school bears corresponding **supplementary
liability** if it failed its management duties. Cyberbullying and online
reputation cases arising during the school day can therefore end in civil
liability for the school too.

The authors' recommendations:

1. **Strengthen internet education and network-security legal education —
   and document it.** Fold internet literacy into daily teaching; put
   literacy courses on the curriculum list; offer courses on network
   security and on distinguishing AI-generated content; run themed
   activities; and give staff dedicated training on internet addiction so
   problems surface early. Keep records of all of it.

2. **Deepen the "rule-of-law vice principal" (法治副校长) mechanism.** Use
   it to link up with local courts' juvenile tribunals, procuratorates'
   juvenile divisions, and law firms — mock courts on campus, lawyers and
   judges in classrooms. Schools can borrow from the Guangzhou Internet
   Court's Five-Year Plan for Judicial Protection of Minors Online
   (2026–2030): staff the vice principal with psychological counselors,
   network-technology specialists, and home–school liaison officers to form
   a complementary professional team embedded in the school's protection
   mechanism.

3. **Build a bullying prevention-and-control system covering the full
   discover–stop–report–handle chain.** When an online-infringement or
   cyberbullying dispute involving minors erupts, take effective measures to
   stop escalation and secondary harm, keep a full paper trail throughout,
   and bring in professional lawyers promptly.

4. **Strengthen minors' network-compliance work generally.** The Law, the
   Regulations, and the School Protection Provisions all set supervisory
   requirements on internet-access facilities, installation of protective
   software, anti-addiction mechanisms, and management of smartphones and
   other smart terminals. Schools should implement central and local
   requirements in full — or expect correction orders and other
   administrative measures.

Per the Sixth National Survey on Minors' Internet Use (released by the
Central Committee of the Communist Youth League at the Wuzhen Summit's
minors' online protection forum, November 21, 2024), China has 196 million
minor netizens and an internet-penetration rate among minors of 97.3%.
Minors are digital natives in the literal sense. The internet is embedded in
every layer of their study, social life, and entertainment — bringing broad
opportunity, but also, with fast-iterating AI, new species of harmful
information, personal information leakage, cyberbullying, and privacy
infringement that weigh on minds still maturing. The school, as a core arena
of minors' growth, should be the "main battlefield" of their online
protection — with institutionalized systems as the foundation and
full-process compliance in incident response.

---

**Notes**

1. Guangzhou Internet Court, "Model Cases on Judicial Protection of Minors
   Online (II)," June 2, 2026:
   <https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/_YRiCiMNkpHHCrJgMt8H-w>
2. Supreme People's Procuratorate, "Model Cases on Procuratorial Organs'
   Comprehensive Performance of Duties in Strengthening Minors' Online
   Protection," May 31, 2023:
   <https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/Z1K_8o-purkNvm425guy2Q>
3. Zhejiang Procuratorate, "Model Cases on Judicial Protection of Minors by
   Zhejiang Procuratorial Organs," May 29, 2024:
   <https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/N-kH1mJlMbRIHTF9wPM9uQ>

---

**Source:** 余苏 (Yu Su, partner), 张美怡 (Zhang Meiyi), and 潘扬璋
(Pan Yangzhang), "未成年人网络保护进行时——从典型案例看学校的网络保护职能,"
published July 9, 2026 on the JunHe Legal Review (君合法律评论) WeChat
Official Account, [original article](https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/jvq2lSjDsfMRpIT-DqqWjA).
Yu Su's practice covers education, life sciences and health, compliance, and
dispute resolution. Per the source's own disclaimer, the article represents
the authors' personal views and is not a formal legal opinion of JunHe.

— Not legal advice.
