Filed under platform-economy
Every brief tagged "platform-economy".
- § 01 · E-COMMERCE-LAW
China's 2026 Draft E-Commerce Law Amendment: From Marketplace Transactions to Platform-Economy Governance
On July 4, 2026, the State Administration for Market Regulation and the Ministry of Commerce released the Draft Amendment to the E-Commerce Law for public comment, with comments due August 4, 2026. The draft has 20 articles and, according to the official notice and Xinhua Q&A, moves in five directions: expanding the law's adjustment scope beyond platforms and in-platform operators to other platform-economy participants; strengthening the platform responsibility system with richer, more graduated regulatory tools; building an integrated supervision mechanism for cross-sector platform operations, including consistent online/offline business supervision and stronger department and central-local coordination; targeting prominent illegal conduct in e-commerce; and deepening open cooperation by aligning rules, regulation, management and standards with international practice, supporting industry self-discipline and orderly outbound expansion, and adding countermeasure tools to protect Chinese enterprises. DCC reads the amendment as an attempt to reposition the E-Commerce Law from a transaction/platform statute into a platform-economy governance statute, with operational implications for platform rulemaking, merchant and worker protection, consumer governance, data/network security clauses, competition compliance, and outbound platform expansion.
- § 02 · PERSONAL-INFORMATION
Ai Lin — Why Platform Gig Workers Need PI-Protection Tilt and How to Build It
Ai Lin (Jilin University Law School) takes on the under-attended question of personal-information protection for platform gig workers — the food-delivery couriers, ride-hail drivers, freight drivers, and 'internet marketers' who occupy China's new-employment-form category. The structural problem: PIPL's individual-consent baseline doesn't work in employment relations where the worker has no meaningful bargaining power against the platform's algorithmic management. Ai imports the alienated-labor framework from Marx and the 'scenario fairness' principle from contextual integrity to argue for a tilt-protection regime. Three operational responses: enhanced transparency + tiered PI safeguards; treating algorithmic rules as workplace regulations subject to collective bargaining; full-process regulatory accountability. Highly relevant for multinationals operating platform-gig models in China or contracting with Chinese platform workforces.