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These days just about any information in North America related to China, especially regarding intellectual property (IP), is highly negative. The narrative is along the lines of “China is an adversary with deliberately lax IP laws who has stolen and continues to steal our IP, etc.”. This characterization of China is reinforced by our political leaders (When asked during the Leaders’ debate what was the greatest security threat to Canada, Prime Minister Carney replied with one word. “China”). Donald Trump continues to have an obsession with China, the latest manifestation of which is the recent announcement that the US will revoke the visa status of an undetermined number of Chinese students currently studying in the US. (Over a quarter of a million students from China are currently studying at American colleges and universities, many simply seeking an alternative to studying in the hyper-competitive environment at home). The “China as IP thief” narrative is supported by government publications such as the annual Special 301 Report produced by the Office of the US Trade Representative (USTR) which this year had ten full pages on China. One excerpt will suffice to give you the flavour of the report. “In 2024, the pace of reforms in China aimed at addressing intellectual property (IP) protection and enforcement remained slow…Concerns remain about longstanding issues, including technology transfer, trade secrets, counterfeiting, online piracy, copyright law, patent and related policies, bad faith trademarks, and geographical indications.” Well, that covers the waterfront. One wonders how Chinese brands, innovators and creators manage to survive in such an environment.
This is not to dismiss the darker side of China’s long IP history. Have there been cases of industrial espionage involving China? Yes, certainly. There have also reportedly been more than 1200 intellectual property theft lawsuits brought by US companies against Chinese entities in either the US or China over the past 25 years. There is no question that IP protection in China is not all it could and should be, or that some Chinese companies and other entities have been aggressive in seeking to acquire IP by less than transparent means. But that is not the whole story. While the number of IP infringement lawsuits against Chinese entities over the years sounds like a lot, this business website estimates that the number of IP litigation cases globally totals around 12,000 annually. There are several thousand patent litigation cases alone in the US each year. A lot of US companies sue other US companies in the patent, trademark and copyright field. And Chinese companies sue Chinese companies.
In the past, Chinese IP laws had loopholes, were often weakly enforced and were dealt with by courts that had scant knowledge and training in IP matters. That is rapidly changing as China not only climbs the innovation ladder, but has come to dominate it in some areas, such as EV’s and EV batteries, cashless payment systems, renewable energy and others. It is rapidly catching up in generative AI. While this has been happening, Chinese courts have been producing some interesting and increasingly sophisticated decisions when it comes to AI and copyright. China–like other countries–is grappling with several aspects of this issue. There is the question of finding the right balance between protecting creators and innovators while using domestic creative works to spur AI training, development and research. Another element is the extent to which AI assisted or created works qualify for copyright protection. There is currently no Text and Data Mining (TDM) exception in Chinese law to allow AI training on copyrighted content nor is there a definitive interpretation as to whether content produced by AI can be protected by copyright. However, several court decisions, which we examine below, have shed some light on this complex question.
Dreamwriter Case
In one of the earlier cases, which I wrote about back in 2020, (the Dreamwriter case), a Chinese court (in Shenzhen) ruled that an automated article written by an AI program (Dreamwriter), created by Tencent, which had been copied and published without permission by another Chinese company, Yinxun, was nevertheless subject to copyright protection because it met the originality test through the involvement of a creative group of editors. These people had performed a number of functions to direct the program, such as arranging the data input and format, selecting templates for the structure of the article, and training the algorithm model. The article was ruled to be a protectable work, and Yinxun was found to have infringed.
Li v Liu Case
The relatively loose interpretation regarding the degree of human engagement required to protect the output of an AI program in the Dreamwriter case has been supported by other Chinese courts. In the prominent Li v Liu case, the Beijing Internet Court ruled that Mr. Li, who had created the image of a young woman using the AI program Stable Diffusion, had provided “significant intellectual input and personalized expression” in creating the image through a series of prompts. As explained in detail by this article from Technollama, the prompts (along with a number of negative prompts) were sufficient for the court to decide that Li had met the standard of creative expression.
These were Li’s prompts;
“ultra-photorealistic: 1.3), extremely high quality highdetail RAW color photo, in locations, Japan idol, highly detailed symmetrical attractive face, angular symmetrical face, perfect skin, skin pores, dreamy black eyes, reddish-brown plaits hairs, uniform, long legs, thighhighs, soft focus, (film grain, vivid colors, Film emulation, kodak gold portra 100, 35mm, canon50 f1,2), Lens Flare, Golden Hour, HD, Cinematic, Beautiful Dynamic Lighting”
Liu, who had been sued by Li for using the AI generated image without authorization, was found liable for infringement and fined 500 CNY (about USD75).
At that time (late 2023), this decision was considered ground-breaking for image-based works given the position of the US Copyright Office (USCO). USCO had denied copyright registration to several generative-AI created image works owing to insufficient human creativity. (see If AI Tramples Copyright During its Training and Development, Should AI’s Output Benefit from Copyright Protection? Part One: Stephen Thaler and Part Two: Jason Allen). Since then (in January of this year) the USCO has taken a more nuanced position, permitting registration of an AI assisted work (an image called A Single Piece of American Cheese, created by graphic artist Kent Kiersey). Although Kiersey used InvokeAI to create the work, in the view of the US Copyright Office, sufficient human creativity was involved through the “selection, coordination, and arrangement of material generated by artificial intelligence”.
Plastic Chair Case
If China has been in the forefront of acknowledging that human control over AI tools used to generate content qualifies the works for copyright protection, a more recent case has reset the pendulum somewhat. As recounted in this blog by UK-based market research firm IAM, very recently a court in Jiangsu Province dismissed a copyright infringement claim brought by a designer against a company that manufactured, without a licence, children’s plastic chairs based on her AI-based designs. The designer, Feng Runjuan, had created three designs using the AI program Midjourney and posted them to social media, including the prompt she had used. Her prompt was “Children’s chair with jelly texture, shape of cute pink butterfly, glass texture, light background“. The company manufacturing the chairs approached Feng to license the designs but was unable to reach an agreement with her. They then went ahead anyway (without a licence) to produce chairs that bore some similarity to the original designs, using Feng’s original prompt with some tweaks. Feng sued. There was little doubt that the chair manufacturing company had used her prompts to produce the chair design, but the key question was whether the AI generated designs qualified as original works meriting copyright protection.
Feng was unable to reproduce the original images using her prompts owing to the randomness of the AI program. This suggested to the court that it was the AI program making the design decisions, not the person providing the prompts. As outlined in the IAM article referenced above, the court held that a user must provide a verifiable creative process that shows the:
It concluded that the original images did not qualify as original works and thus they could not be protected. Feng’s lawsuit failed.
So now we have a situation where one Chinese court has ruled that the prompts generated by Li in what I will call the “young girl image” case constituted sufficient intellectual input and personalized expression to qualify for copyright protection, even though the actual image was generated by an AI program, whereas another court has denied copyright protection for a work also produced with prompts, albeit simpler and far fewer. The difference seems to be the degree of human involvement in creating the prompts, although the fact that Ms. Feng in the plastic chair case was unable to reproduce the original images seems to have also weighed against her. As anyone who has ever used an AI program will know, identical prompts will produce different images owing to the way the program works. Does that disqualify the artist? I would hope not, but the degree of control is clearly a key factor, as both the rulings of Chinese courts and the recent USCO decision to register the work A Single Piece of American Cheese would seem to show. Both Chinese court decisions are defensible, demonstrating careful and reasoned consideration, and are helpful in establishing parameters for use in determining whether works are AI assisted or AI created.
Ultraman Case
Another area where Chinese courts have left their mark is on the topic of AI liability for copyright infringement. In what is known as the “Ultraman” case, a Chinese court (the Guangzhou Internet Court, upheld on appeal by the Intermediate Peoples’ Court in Hangzhou) delivered a ruling of contributory infringement against a company that provided AI generated text-picture services through its website. The complainant was the Chinese licensee of the Japanese company that owns the rights to the cartoon character Ultraman. When the defendant’s website (effectively a chat-bot capable of generating AI images at its users’ request) was asked to generate an Ultraman-related image, it generated a character that appeared to be substantially similar to the claimant’s licensed Ultraman. The court had to decide whether the defendant had infringed the plaintiff’s reproduction and derivative production rights and if so, what remedies were applicable.
In its ruling the court decided that even though the defendant did not directly infringe the licensee’s rights, its failure to exercise a reasonable duty of care to prevent infringements (for example, by cautioning users or providing adequate filtering or blocking mechanisms), rendered it liable for contributory infringement. It was ordered to compensate the claimant the amount of CNY 10,000, about USD1500 (considerably less than the damages sought of CNY300,000). Here we have another sophisticated and well reasoned decision, which appears to have been the first instance globally of recognizing the liability of an AI platform for contributory copyright infringement. It does not create any legal precedents but is a useful contribution to the emerging debate.
These cases well illustrate the growing sophistication and complexity of IP rulings in China and are reflective, in my view, of an economy that is rapidly moving up the innovation and creativity ladder. When it comes to IP protection in China, is the glass half empty or half full? I would argue the latter, even though this may not be the most popular interpretation these days. One thing that I am willing to predict with certainty is that we can expect more interesting and thoughtful IP legal decisions from the Chinese legal system in the months and years ahead.
© Hugh Stephens, 2025. All Rights Reserved.
This article was originally published on Hugh Stephens Blog