Filed under ai-governance
Every brief tagged "ai-governance".
- § 13 · AI-GOVERNANCE
AI Agents and the Limits of Consent — When 'Authorisation' Stops Being One Click
Li Wenlong (科技利维坦) takes the Doubao phone assistant — an AI that 'reads your screen' and acts across apps — and asks whether the consent/authorisation mechanism that traditional data law leans on can survive the agent era. His four challenges: the app-bounded 'private' environment dissolves as data and permissions move across apps (with Nissenbaum's Contextual Integrity as the only real conceptual anchor, and far from operational); agents that *act* (not just retrieve) push informed consent past the point of failure already reached by personalised ads; purpose limitation collapses because an agent chooses its own path, means and decisions from a low-information instruction, edging into automated decision-making; and ultra vires agency shifts liability from user to platform, with China's 'hallucination case' and the Air Canada case as the only thin precedents. For overseas counsel building or advising on agentic AI in China: a map of why 'authorisation' is becoming a problem of agency, system control, liability allocation and autonomy — not a checkbox — and why transparency is now a prerequisite, not a feature.
- § 14 · CSL
China's Cybersecurity Law Just Got Teeth — The 2025 Amendment and What Changed
On October 28, 2025, the NPC Standing Committee adopted the first amendment to China's Cybersecurity Law since 2017, effective January 1, 2026. Compliance Talker's global legal policy team walks through what changed across 14 amendments: a new framework provision on AI safety and development, harmonization with PIPL and the Civil Code on personal information, sharply increased penalties (10× cap on top fines), expanded application of the dual-penalty system to individual officers, and broader extraterritorial reach. For overseas teams, the operational takeaway is that cybersecurity compliance is now an executive-level risk, not a documentation exercise.
- § 15 · AI-GOVERNANCE
Reverse Interoperability: Li Wenlong's Frame for the Doubao On-Device Agent Fight
ByteDance's Doubao phone assistant — preinstalled at the device layer to operate other apps on a user's behalf — was met with pop-up blocks from WeChat and others citing security and risk-control. Li Wenlong (科技利维坦) argues the dispute is, at bottom, a question of how China's competition-law toolkit (反不正当竞争法 / 反垄断法) absorbs the idea of interoperability — and specifically what he calls 'reverse interoperability (反向互操作性)'. The classic interoperability problem is a platform refusing to open up, with antitrust used as a market remedy to force access. Doubao inverts it: interoperability is fully achieved at the device level, and the legal question becomes whether the law should restrict 'over-interoperation.' Li maps interoperability's journey from the Microsoft case through GDPR data portability and the DMA to the agent era, distinguishes the Doubao fight from the decade-old 3Q War, and predicts on-device-agent governance will look less like classic antitrust and more like the ex-ante, conditional-use compliance model emerging for AI training data. For overseas counsel: a structural read on the platform-access war that on-device AI agents are about to intensify.