Marketers in China to face new legal readings of consumer data

CHINA INNOVATION 2016: With the fast pace of technology and business models in China, we can expect novel legal questions to be asked of marketers in future.

Marketers in China to face new legal readings of consumer data

The interpretation of data for marketing purposes has taken a new turn in one particular May 2016 court case brought by lifestyle information site Dianping against Baidu. It was nominated by The Internet Society of China as one of the 10 most influential incidents in internet regulation in China.

Baidu was found to have 'scraped' consumer reviews from Dianping and presented some of the reviews in full on Baidu Maps and Baidu Zhidao (a Q&A service) without the authorisation of Dianping.

This practice allowed Baidu users access to the consumer reviews without visiting Dianping. 

Long story short, Dianping won the case, and the Pudong New Area People’s Court ruled that Baidu should pay more than 3 million yuan in compensation to Dianping’s parent company, Shanghai Hantao.

Before the ruling, Baidu argued that it was a search service, while Dianping was a classified information site that provides independent reviews of local services such as restaurants and hotels—thus not a competitor. It also said the user comments on Dianping were not created by Dianping itself and therefore were not copyrighted material.

But the court rejected these arguments, ruling that the information offered by the two companies was similar and thus they should be considered competitors.

See all of our annual CHINA INNOVATION features

The court found that Baidu's use of Dianping's data reduced the number of Dianping users, causing a financial loss to Dianping, and also breached business ethics.

According to Andy Huang, a Beijing associate at law firm Hogan Lovells, a key element in the court’s analysis was that Dianping had made significant efforts in the collection and use of the original data, even if the authors of the reviews were individual consumers and even if it did not own them.

The court decision suggests that companies that target the same group of consumers may be viewed as competitors, regardless of the nature of the specific services they provide, Huang said.

This judgment has implications for the production, collection and use of consumer-related information by both internet players and non-internet brands, especially if the information at stake had commercial value and conferred an unfair competitive advantage. 

A ranking of the most active reviewers on Dianping, topped by 'xps720' from Beijing who wrote 7946 in total
 

 

Source:
Campaign China

Related Articles

Just Published

12 hours ago

Opinion: Jaguar’s rebrand might actually be a ...

I’m going to go against the grain here and say I think Jaguar’s new rebrand is a genius move.

13 hours ago

PR makes the leap to Bluesky—but what’s the verdict ...

As social media users appear to flee X in favour of the aptly named alternative—Bluesky—PRWeek UK asks comms pros how they’re finding the new platform in its early days of popularity.

13 hours ago

Burson hires Edelman’s Taj Reid as global chief ...

Reid replaces Simon Shaw in the role.

13 hours ago

Will the Coca-Cola ad deter brands from using AI in ...

Social media users have criticised the brand's use of AI in its 'Holidays are coming' ad.