Skip to content
China steps up its commitment to protect creators’ works from being infringed in the NFT space

News -

China steps up its commitment to protect creators’ works from being infringed in the NFT space

In a bid to protect copyright and stimulate creativity, the Chinese Government has intensified its efforts to monitor people who copy other creative works without their consent to create non-fungible tokens (NFTs).

The National Copyright Administration (NCA) will clamp down on offences such as the minting of NFTs based on other people’s works like art, cartoons, music, video games, etc without permission.

The move is part of a two-month campaign rolled out jointly with the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, the Public Security Bureau and the Cyberspace Administration of China.

The NCA believes that supervising copyright violations and imposing penalties on violators in the digital collectibles space has become vital in order to strengthen creators’ rights in the virtual arena.

The goal is to promote a “market-oriented, legalized and international business environment, and provide the copyright support needed to stimulate entrepreneurship and innovation,” the agency said.

NFTs have received a lot of interest in China during the past twelve months. The virtual assets are sometimes referred to as digital collectibles in order to disassociate them from cryptocurrencies, which have been officially banned from trading since 2021 as a result of a protracted crackdown.

The Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) tracked down and closed about 12,000 crypto related social media accounts as they were being used to mislead people by “guiding” them to invest in virtual assets under the pretext of “financial innovation and blockchain,” prompting substantial loses.

Several Chinese companies have already reduced their NFT operations due to increasing legal difficulties and declining public interest following last year’s initial excitement.

In September, social media and video gaming giant Tencent Holdings announced that it will stop issuing digital collectibles on its NFT platform, Huanhe, to the public.

But fans continue to remain active in the space. Before the start of this year’s Mid-Autumn Festival, some “digital mooncakes” were sold online for about 10,000 yuan.

PitchMark helps innovators deter idea theft, so that third-parties that they share their idea with get the idea but don’t take it. Visit PitchMark.net and register for free as a PitchMark member today.

Topics

Categories

Contacts

Mark Laudi

Mark Laudi

Press contact Managing Partner (+65) 6223 2249

Related content

Photo by Austin Neill on Unsplash

NFTs are the latest frontier in musicians’ long battle to gain control over their IP

In the music business, the ownership of intellectual property has often been a controversial subject, and that’s all because of the lopsided balance of control. In short, record companies tend to seize most of the control. But that might change, if start-ups pushing ownership models based on non-fungible tokens (NFTs) take off.
In the short amount of time that NFTs have become a trending topic

Screen shot of the official Tarantino NFTs website

Tarantino’s controversial Pulp Fiction NFTs offer a glimpse of entertainment’s future

When it was released in 1994, Pulp Fiction was lauded for its innovative breaking of the chronological order, its distinctive dialogue, and for break-out performances from Uma Thurman, Samuel L. Jackson, and John Travolta. It was one of the movies that propelled the 1990s wave of indie cinema, and its writer-director Quentin Tarantino became one of Hollywood’s most celebrated auteurs.
And it l

Japan court orders JPY 500 million in damages over "fast movie" uploads that earned just JPY 7 million for the infringer

Japan court orders JPY 500 million in damages over "fast movie" uploads that earned just JPY 7 million for the infringer

With an aim to deter unauthorized use of copyright-protected work for personal benefits, the Tokyo District Court ordered a man and woman in their 20s to pay JPY 500 million (USD3.6 million) in damages for uploading minutes-long, edited versions of their films - known as "fast movies" on YouTube - without permission.
The duo edited and published ‘fast movies’ for 54 works, including "Shin Godz

Donald Trump accused of using copyright-protected images in his NFT collection

Donald Trump accused of using copyright-protected images in his NFT collection

Former US president Donald Trump has been accused of using copyright-protected photos in his NFT collection, with social media users calling his money-making endeavor a "scam".
Last month, Trump launched 45,000 photos as an NFT collection called ‘Collect Trump Cards’, or ‘Trump Digital Trading Cards’ as it’s officially known on OpenSea.
The collection, which depicts him as various characters

Let your clients get the idea, without taking it.

PitchMark deters idea theft and provides you with options if it happens.

PitchMark protects the expression of your original concepts, designs, proposals, business plans, creative pitches, music - in short, any idea that you conceived and published, and claim as your own. It gives you peace-of-mind by signalling to whoever you share it with that you are its creator, and that you wish to be respected as such.

If you receive or evaluate ideas or pitches, join PitchMark as a sign of your commitment to respect the Intellectual Property rights of their creators. Attract more in-depth pitches from a wider range of sources. Highlight your PitchMark membership in your Sustainability or CSR Report.

PitchMark