Filed under anti-unfair-competition
Every brief tagged "anti-unfair-competition".
- § 01 · DATA-ECONOMY
Li Yang: Why 'Data Rights-Confirmation' Is a Category Error — Dynamic Data Can't Be a Registration Object, and AUCL Article 13 Is the Better Path
DCC's summary of an opinion piece by Li Yang (李扬), professor at China University of Political Science and Law, arguing that the whole project of 'data rights-confirmation' (数据确权) — and the data-IP registration pilots run under it — rests on a category error. In Chinese IP law, 'confirmation' (确权) is the authoritative validation of an already-existing right, and it presupposes three things data lacks: a determinate object, defined rights content, and clear boundaries. Civil Code Art. 127 only defers the question; 'data IP' is a policy concept, not a legal one; and data is co-produced by many parties, so registration proves who submitted data, not who owns it. Li Yang's sharpest move is the dynamic-object problem: registration regimes (real estate, IP, equity) require a persistently stable object, but data's value lives in continuous updating, so the data at registration is never the data in dispute — and blockchain/hash/timestamp '存证' only fix a historical snapshot, never the living data stream, confusing proof-of-existence with object-identification. He concludes that registration's real functions are evidentiary and publicity/transaction-support — not rights-confirmation — and that data governance should move from rights-confirmation to interest-protection, from static-rights thinking to dynamic-competition thinking, protecting commercial-data interests under Article 13 of the Anti-Unfair Competition Law. DCC's read for overseas counsel, against the data-IP registration regime and the Beijing Internet Court's first AUCL Article 13 ruling.
- § 02 · ANTI-UNFAIR-COMPETITION
How the Beijing Internet Court Found a Platform 'Lawfully Held' Its Data Under the New AUCL Article 13 — and Where It Meets the 'Right to Hold Data'
The Beijing Internet Court's 30 April 2026 judgment — the first published application of the data clause (Article 13) of the 2025-revised Anti-Unfair Competition Law, effective 15 October 2025 — turns on one threshold question: did the plaintiff platform 'lawfully hold' (合法持有) the scraped career data? DCC walks through exactly how the court got to 'yes', step by step: the data originated as personal information collected with user consent under the platform's Service Agreement and Privacy Policy (no unlawful processing on record); the operator's build-and-run investment aggregated scattered records into a dataset with standalone economic value; and that dataset is the foundational input for the platform's matching business and competitive advantage. From those three findings the court derives its operative definition — data lawfully collected/stored/used, formed through substantial investment, and capable of generating business benefit or competitive advantage — and holds that the defendant's crawler-and-resale scheme, circumventing login and access controls, was unfair competition (¥200,000 + ¥30,000-plus in costs). The brief then takes up the doctrinal question: does Article 13's 'lawfully held data' correspond to the 'right to hold data' (数据持有权) in the Data 20 Articles' three-rights framework? The answer is a functional yes — the court is enforcing the holding right's purely defensive content, exactly as Hong Yanqing's analysis predicted AUCL Article 13 would — but not a doctrinal one: it builds a competition-tort interest on investment and lawful sourcing, deliberately sidestepping any claim that data is a typed property right. DCC's case brief for overseas counsel, drawn against the earlier AUCL Article 2 general-clause data cases.
- § 03 · JUDICIAL
Datatang v. Yinmu — China's First Ruling on a Data-IP Registration Certificate, and Why Open-Sourced Data Is Still Protected
A consolidated case study of 数据堂诉隐木科技 (Datatang v. Yinmu) — the Beijing IP Court's June 2024 appeal ruling, widely called China's first case on the evidentiary effect of a data-IP registration certificate. The dispute: Datatang built voice datasets for AI training, open-sourced some under a license; Yinmu took and redistributed them in the same data-services market. DCC synthesizes four commentaries (the case report, a Tsinghua analysis, and two Shenzhen Data Exchange DEXC+ deep-dives) into the four holdings that matter for overseas counsel: (1) a data-IP registration certificate is prima facie evidence of property-type interests and lawful sourcing — but not an absolute property right (property-rights-statutism); (2) open-sourced data, though neither trade secret nor copyrightable compilation, is protectable under the Anti-Unfair Competition Law's general clause; (3) the protection hierarchy (compilation work → trade secret → AUCL Art. 2); and (4) whether the taker honored the open-source license is the hinge for 'improper conduct.'
- § 04 · DERIVATIVE-DATA
Derivative Data Products and Public Data Opening — Legal Challenges and Compliance Points
As China opens public-sector datasets for commercial exploitation, companies building derivative data products (衍生数据产品) face a layered compliance problem: the definition of 'derivative data' in the National Data Administration's 2025 glossary is deliberately high-threshold (substantial transformation, significant value uplift); provincial rules on automated collection, source-labelling, and sensitive-data assessment are inconsistent; and a three-way collision between the open-data rules, third-party platform terms, and the 2025 Anti-Unfair Competition Law amendments has no clean resolution. Wang Yi and Yu Hao (both DEXCO-certified partners at Global Law Office Shenzhen) map the definitional landscape, five categories of operational red lines, and four protective strategies — including the new data-specific provision in the revised Anti-Unfair Competition Law — for practitioners building or advising on derivative-data businesses.
- § 05 · AI-GOVERNANCE
Reverse Interoperability: Li Wenlong's Frame for the Doubao On-Device Agent Fight
ByteDance's Doubao phone assistant — preinstalled at the device layer to operate other apps on a user's behalf — was met with pop-up blocks from WeChat and others citing security and risk-control. Li Wenlong (科技利维坦) argues the dispute is, at bottom, a question of how China's competition-law toolkit (反不正当竞争法 / 反垄断法) absorbs the idea of interoperability — and specifically what he calls 'reverse interoperability (反向互操作性)'. The classic interoperability problem is a platform refusing to open up, with antitrust used as a market remedy to force access. Doubao inverts it: interoperability is fully achieved at the device level, and the legal question becomes whether the law should restrict 'over-interoperation.' Li maps interoperability's journey from the Microsoft case through GDPR data portability and the DMA to the agent era, distinguishes the Doubao fight from the decade-old 3Q War, and predicts on-device-agent governance will look less like classic antitrust and more like the ex-ante, conditional-use compliance model emerging for AI training data. For overseas counsel: a structural read on the platform-access war that on-device AI agents are about to intensify.