China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Nation’s 1st internet court is open for business

- By CAO YIN in Hangzhou caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

China has set up its first court specializi­ng in handling of internet-related disputes in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, where many technology enterprise­s are located, amid rapid growth of online purchases and financial activities in the country.

The Hangzhou Court of the Internet is responsibl­e for hearing six types of civil and administra­tive internet-related cases in the city, such as those involving online intellectu­al property rights and e-commerce disputes. It will also handle other webrelated cases designated by higher courts, according to the top court.

“The establishm­ent of the court is to meet the growing legal demand from litigants. It will also help the public to solve online disputes more effectivel­y,” Zhou Qiang, president of the Supreme People’s Court, said after visiting the court on Friday.

He said the new court will play an important role in maintainin­g a safe internet and must provide good legal service to litigants.

A key feature of the court is that it allows litigants to handle a lawsuit entirely online. From case filing to the court hearing, litigants do not have to go to the court in person, according to Zhu Shenyuan, vice-president of the Zhejiang Provincial High People’s Court.

“Our aim is to make court hearings keep pace with the fast developmen­t of cyberspace and to explore new ways of hearing lawsuits so that it can be expanded across the country,” Zhu said.

People can register at the court’s website — netcourt.gov. cn, which includes an Englishlan­guage version — and then provide evidence and materials. Defendants will be notified via text messages if the court files the case.

Judges will inform both parties of the trial time, and then those involved can log in to the website’s trial page, which uses a remote video system, according to Zhu.

The new internet court is a district-level court, and if litigants disagree with the verdict, they can appeal to the city’s intermedia­te people’s court, he said.

Cheng Jianle, deputy director of the provincial high court’s research office, said the court’s location was carefully chosen.

Hangzhou is home to such technology enterprise­s as Alibaba, the company behind the Alipay mobile payment system, and the Taobao online marketplac­e. Because of this, the city has witnessed a soaring number of online disputes in recent years, he said.

According to the provincial high court, Hangzhou courts handled about 10,000 cases related to e-commerce last year, up from about 600 in 2013.

A trial operation of the internet court, guided by the top court, began in May. The average time of hearings conducted online was 25 minutes.

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