Filed under commentary
Every brief tagged "commentary".
- § 31 · DATA-PROPERTY-RIGHTS
What Does Data Registration Actually Confirm? — A Doctrinal Reading
Long before the SPC's January 2026 'data disputes' case category started squeezing data registration certificates against judicial review, Wang Qinglan had already written the foundational critique: data registration does not 'confirm rights' because there are no legal data rights to confirm. The Data 20 Articles created data property rights, not data legal rights, and Chinese property rights are not Article-conferred civil rights. Registration certificates are 'trust credentials,' not 'rights certificates.' This is the doctrinal essay overseas counsel should read before the SPC sequel.
- § 32 · DATA-EXCHANGES
On-Exchange vs. Off-Exchange Data Trading — A Uniquely Chinese Market Structure
Why does China have data exchanges? Wang Qinglan's piece opens with an observation overseas readers will recognize: 'When you tell foreigners about China's on-exchange data trading market, you get blank stares — because exchange-organized data trading is uniquely Chinese.' The analogy she offers — Shenzhen Data Exchange is to data what the Shenzhen Stock Exchange is to securities — unlocks the architecture. Five tiers of trading venues by public-risk level. Three waves of Chinese data-exchange evolution. And the operational meaning of why on-exchange and off-exchange trading coexist.
- § 33 · DATA-ECONOMY
What Is Actually Traded on China's Data Exchanges — A Bakery Metaphor
Per the Shenzhen Provisional Measures for Data Trading Administration, four categories of object can be traded on a Chinese data exchange: data products, data services, data tools, and other regulator-approved objects. Wang Qinglan walks through what each means in plain language with a bakery metaphor — wheat (raw data) becomes flour (data resources) becomes cakes (data products); a baker is a data service; the oven is a data tool. The piece is useful precisely because it answers a question overseas teams rarely think to ask: what are the data exchanges actually selling?
- § 34 · PUBLIC-DATA
Case Study — A Public-Data Operator Hands Personal Data to a Bank. Two Compliance Failures.
A real-case analysis from Wang Qinglan. A state-affiliated auction company holds the public-data operating right for vehicle license-plate auction data. A bank persuades it to hand over the personal data of winning bidders. The bank builds a targeted credit product and pays the auction company RMB 12 million a year in revenue share. Two compliance failures: (1) no individual consent under PIPL; (2) no credit reference business license under the Credit Reference Industry Regulation and Credit Reference Business Measures. Public-data authorized operation does not displace the credit reference licensing regime.