Caixin
Caixin Global – Latest China News & Headlines

Home >

TRENDING
TCL Tech to Buy Back Panel Unit Stake for $1.3 Billion
Optical Interconnect Maker Lightelligence Files for Hong Kong IPO
U.S. Chipmaker Onsemi Doubles Down on China With New Shanghai Headquarters
LATEST
TCL Tech to Buy Back Panel Unit Stake for $1.3 Billion
CAS Space Seeks IPO as China’s Reusable Rocket Race Heats Up
U.S. Chipmaker Onsemi Doubles Down on China With New Shanghai Headquarters
Optical Interconnect Maker Lightelligence Files for Hong Kong IPO
CAS Space Launches Reusable Rocket in China’s Satellite Push
DeepSeek Goes Out for 10 Hours Amid China’s AI Demand Surge
OpenClaw Craze Is Driving Next Phase of AI Development, Insiders Say
China, South Korea Robotics Firms Explore Embodied AI Cooperation
Analysis: Meta’s Manus Deal Faces Scrutiny in China Over Tech Exports, Antitrust Concerns
Chinese GPU Maker MetaX Doubles Revenue Amid Push for Domestic Chips
Kuaishou Ramps Up AI Commercialization as Kling Revenue Hits $150 Million
Alibaba Launches AI Agent for Small Businesses With International Ambitions
China Telecom to Boost AI Spending Amid Capex Cut and Slowing Growth
Siemens Unveils 26 China-Made Products in Industrial AI Push
Alibaba’s Qwen Launches AI Ride-Hailing Feature to Rival Didi
AI Agents to Reshape Global White-Collar Economy, Alibaba Chairman Says
China Opens First National Testing Center for Flying Cars
Tencent Folds AI Lab Into Hunyuan Team in Major AI Overhaul
Unitree Robotics Files for $608 Million STAR Market IPO
Xiaomi Unveils Trio of Large AI Models in $8.7 Billion Bet

By Charlotte Yang / Dec 26, 2018 06:27 PM / Business & Tech

Beijing's Internet Court has decided its first case -- a dispute between two video apps. Photo: VCG

Beijing's Internet Court has decided its first case -- a dispute between two video apps. Photo: VCG

Beijing’s first-ever internet court case has come to an end.

The object of the dispute? A 13-second video published on a popular app.

Short-video app TikTok sued Chinese internet giant Baidu and Baidu’s own video app Huopai in September for copyright infringement, requesting monetary compensation. TikTok said it owns the exclusive copyrights to a user video published on its platform, which Huopai had published without TikTok’s permission. Huopai also allowed its users to download the video, TikTok said.

The Beijing Internet Court ruled Wednesday that short videos online can enjoy the same copyright protections as television and radio program, answering a key question in the case, Beijing News reported.

The court said that as an online publishing platform, TikTok, which is known in China as Douyin, had the right to file a lawsuit. However, it ruled that Baidu’s actions did not constitute copyright infringement, because Baidu is an online service provider, and it immediately deleted the video when asked to by TikTok.

This case attracted much attention as the first case ever heard by Beijing’s Internet Court, one of the country’s three courts that handle disputes originating online. The hearing was conducted online and the court accepted digital evidence stored on blockchain.


Share this article
Open WeChat and scan the QR code