Banksy had it wrong, at least when it comes to litigating against Chinese companies. Anywhere does not cut it.

China Contracts: Make Them Enforceable or Don’t Bother

Contracting in China: The Old and the New  It used to be common for OEM manufacturing in China to be done on a purchase order basis, with no underlying contract. Much service work done by foreigners for Chinese clients was based on an exchange of emails.  Today, however, to be able to bring a plausible

Is it the shoes?

Don’t Be Like Mike: Register Your Trademarks in CHINESE

Michael Jordan just lost another China lawsuit in his ongoing effort to combat alleged trademark infringement in China. This lose highlights a point that must be familiar to even the most casual reader of this blog: Michael Jordan just lost another China lawsuit in his ongoing effort to combat alleged trademark infringement. This case, like

China and Motion Picture Copyright

China Motion Picture Copyrights

China joined WIPO (the World Intellectual Property Organization) in 1980 and it introduced its first copyright law in 1990. China adopted modern intellectual property laws as a condition of joining the WTO (the World Trade Organization) in 2001. 2001 China intellectual property laws amendments The 2001 amendments were the first round of modernization of China’s

Fake China Law Firms

Fake China Law Firms are the Real Deal

Since 2006, we have been writing about fake China law firms. See China Where Even The “Law Firms” Are Fake. In that post we talked about fake Chinese lawyers taking money from American companies for trademark registrations: There are those who take money to file trademarks in China and then simply run away. A new client

How to navigate the maze of doing internet business in China.

Selling Software as a Service (SaaS) in China: The Foreign Server Option

As we pointed out in SaaS in China: Build a compliant Go-to-Market Plan by Looking Beyond the Regulations and again in Foreign SaaS in China: Get Off of My Cloud, the PRC does not permit foreign entities to make direct sales of SaaS products from servers located within China. For foreign software companies, this is a major

China Lawyers

The Fake China Law Firm Scam

Way back in 2006, I wrote about fake China law firms in China: Where Even The “Law Firms” Are Fake. In that post I talked about fake Chinese lawyers taking money from foreign companies for trademark registrations: There are those who take money to file trademarks in China and then simply run away. A new

China Consultant

China Consultant or All Knowing China Expert

China’s recently stepped up efforts to root out unregistered foreign businesses in China has caused a rash of China consultants to retain the China lawyers at my law firm. From our work in forming China WFOEs (wholly foreign owned entities) for these consultants, we have discovered that many China consultants are falling dangerously short in

China Visa for Short Term Work

China Visa Requirements for Short Work Stays

Under Chinese law a foreigner who comes to China to complete a “short-term work task” and stays no more than 90 days, must get a work visa (a Z visa). A “short-term work task” is defined as one of the following: Tasks such as those involving technology, scientific research, management and guidance at the place

China contract seal

China Contract Signing Formalities

China Contract Formalities Contracts with Chinese companies often generate a unique set of legal and procedural intricacies. China’s legal landscape differs significantly from that of American, European, or Australian jurisdictions, primarily due to its distinct regulatory frameworks and business culture. These differences require a China-centric approach to both the drafting of China contracts and to

China Cloud Computing Laws

Foreign SaaS in China: Get Off of My Cloud

As businesses are rapidly moving to the cloud, the Chinese government seems to be taking its lead from the Rolling Stones: Hey! You! Get off of my cloud. China wants to run its own private cloud, and foreigners need not apply. The primary issue for Internet businesses in China is that all commercial Internet businesses

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