Filed under data-use-right
Every brief tagged "data-use-right".
- § 01 · DATA-PROPERTY-RIGHTS
When the 'Right to Use Data' Goes External — Provision, Derivative Data, and the Erosion of Upstream Control
Part two of Hong Yanqing's (洪延青, 网安寻路人) study notes on China's 'separation of three rights' data-property framework turns to the Right to Use Data (数据使用权). The official definition (国家数据局, Common Data Terms Batch 2) makes the use right an *internal* power — 'I use my own data' to process, aggregate, analyse, and form derivative data — exercised on the premise of *not* providing data externally. So 'granting a use right to a downstream party' is not the use right travelling outward; it is the upstream party exercising its **operation right** to license, while the downstream party acquires a use right. That externalisation flips the downstream's legal position from PIPL **entrusted processor** (委托处理) to **provision** (提供) or **joint processing** — triggering notice and *separate consent* for personal information, and the Network Data Security Regulation's contracting duties. And because a strong use right lets the downstream form **derivative data** (衍生数据) — models, scores, indices, labels — value migrates downstream even though the raw data stays upstream. DCC's read for overseas counsel: in China data deals the use right is real but never self-bounding; whether a partner will grant an open, autonomous use right depends on its business model (control-dependent vs monetisation), and the default structure you should expect is *controlled use* (sandbox, privacy computing, federated modelling), not a clean copy.