China Daily Global Edition (USA)

E-commerce draft weighs platforms’ liability

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s top legislatur­e was asked on Thursday to strengthen a liability clause in the latest draft of the e-commerce law to better protect consumers and prevent platform operators from becoming too powerful.

The draft, which is being deliberate­d by the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, sparked a debate by lawmakers and legal experts over a change in the liability provisions after it was submitted to the top legislativ­e body for the fourth reading on Monday.

The latest draft reduces the liability of e-commerce platforms in cases where they fail to properly review the qualificat­ions of those selling goods or providing health or lifestyle services, or if they fail to protect consumers’ safety.

Some legislator­s were concerned about the change when reviewing the draft, saying that it would weaken consumer protection­s and make e-commerce platform operators more powerful.

On Thursday, the NPC Constituti­on and Law Committee suggested that lawmakers should increase operators’ responsibi­lity.

Xu Xianming, a member of the NPC Standing Committee, said the softer language took the legislatio­n backward and that platforms should face higher standards.

The change reduces the liability of e-commerce platforms to what is called “supplement­ary liability”, rather than “joint liability”.

Joint liability refers to both the product seller and the e-commerce platform. Consumers who suffer damages would be allowed to sue sellers and platforms together. By contrast “supplement­ary liability” means consumers can only sue the seller of the goods in that situation, Xu said.

Cai Fang, another member of the Standing Committee, said adding protection consumers is a priority.

The China Consumers Associatio­n also expressed concern about the latest draft, saying e-commerce platform operators’ liability would be reduced greatly if the draft passes as written, according to a report in China Consumer News on Thursday.

“Joint liability can help fight fake products online, especially food or medicines that harm people’s health,” an official of the associatio­n told for the paper. “It can push the platform operators to shoulder their responsibi­lity and adapt to society’s demands.”

Zhu Wei, an associate law professor at China University of Political Science and Law, said awareness about protecting consumers’ rights and health shouldn’t be weakened, though some e-commerce platforms have complained that they have suffered unfairly in lawsuits brought under joint liability.

“When there are difficulti­es with sellers of goods online, asking the platform operators to pay compensati­on first is the better way to protect our rights,” he said.

But Xue Jun, a law professor at Peking University, said the draft does, in fact, highlight protection for consumers.

He said liability for e-commerce platform operators should depend on the specific facts of a case, adding that imposing other obligation­s for online safety protection needs more study.

The legislatur­e said on Monday that drafting the e-commerce law aims to protect the interests of all e-commerce participan­ts, regulate conduct to maintain market order and improve the sustainabl­e and sound developmen­t of e-commerce.

As the world’s largest e-commerce market, China saw its online retail sales grow 32.2 percent year-onyear in 2017 to reach 7.18 trillion yuan ($1.05 trillion).

Joint liability can help fight fake products online, especially food or medicines that harm people’s health. It can push the platform operators to shoulder their responsibi­lity.” An official of the China Consumers Associatio­n

 ?? XU PEIQIN / XINHUA ?? Sales personnel at an e-commerce store in Nantong, Jiangsu province, print express delivery receipts.
XU PEIQIN / XINHUA Sales personnel at an e-commerce store in Nantong, Jiangsu province, print express delivery receipts.

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