In brief:

  • Smart contracts are booming in China with many companies embracing them as a way to expedite signing and quickly resolve contract disputes.
  • Alibaba and JD, two of China’s biggest tech companies and retailers are both pushing smart contracts and blockchain technology.
  • Alibaba is requiring all contacts it signs henceforth to be on its smart contract platform, while JD is looking to work with regulators to draft best practices to promote their ubiquity

One of China's biggest retailers JD.com is leading the effort to draft rules in China about how smart contracts can be used to automate the disbursement of funds when a contract is complete as well as be entered into court as notarized evidence. 

JD’s proposed guidelines are a series of best practices about how to build smart contracts to respect parties’ privacy, how to obtain evidence to be used in a contract dispute in court, as well as how blockchain can be used in court to demonstrate proof of ownership of intellectual property. 

The smart contract industry in China has been booming, accelerated by Covid-19 and the inability of parties to meet face-to-face to negotiate terms and ink deals. A May report from Ever­grande Re­search In­sti­tute, the market research arm of property developer giant Evergrade Group, says that “Smart con­tracts are po­ten­tially the most rev­o­lu­tion­ary ap­pli­ca­tion of the blockchain,” and if they become widespread and ubiquitous in Chinese corporate culture it will “po­ten­tially up­grade [blockchain] from a ‘trust de­vice’ to a key ‘en­gine’ that dri­ves an in­dus­trial wave.”     

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Alibaba’s Ant Financial has also launched a smart contract service that combines smart contracts with e-signatures. Alibaba recently announced that all future contracts it signs will be via Ant Financial’s platform. 

But despite the fact that some of China’s biggest tech companies and retailers have embraced smart contracts there are still questions on their admissibility in court. While Alibaba might have a first-mover advantage, and its demand that all contracts it is involved in be a smart contract has some weight, local market analysts point to JD’s regulation-first approach as the tactic that might be the winner in the long run.

This story was produced in collaboration with our friends at Forkast, a content platform focused on emerging technology at the intersection of business, economy, and politics, from Asia to the world.

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