Filed under data-economy
Every brief tagged "data-economy".
- § 25 · 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.
- § 26 · 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.
- § 27 · 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?