China’s Supreme People’s Court (SPC) has signaled a broader initiative to standardize how digital economy disputes are adjudicated, with new research focused on rulings for virtual currencies and cross-border finance. The move aims to produce clearer judicial guidelines that can handle a rising tide of crypto- and AI-related cases, according to Liu Guixiang, a member of the SPC Judicial Committee. He told Yicai that the court would study adjudication rules for these evolving areas and, as soon as possible, formulate interpretations governing civil compensation in cases such as insider trading and market manipulation.
In addition to crypto and cross-border finance, the SPC outlined plans to examine judicial protections for artificial intelligence cases and data property rights—encompassing disputes over data ownership, data transactions, and AI-generated content. The overarching forecast is to build internal standards that bring greater consistency to a growing slate of digital economy disputes in China, potentially shaping how crypto-related IP and liability are addressed in Chinese courts.
The timing of the comments aligns with a broader enforcement and policy backdrop that has long defined China’s approach to digital assets and related technologies. The same period has seen high-profile cross-border legal activity and a tightening stance on digital assets within and beyond the mainland, underscoring the stakes for investors, developers, and users navigating China’s evolving regulatory terrain.
China’s relationship with cryptocurrency has been cautious and often forbidding. Since 2013, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) has barred financial institutions from providing Bitcoin-related services and has declined to recognize Bitcoin as a currency. This stance hardened in 2021 when a coordinated set of regulators, including the PBOC and securities authorities, issued a blanket ban on all crypto transactions, as well as Bitcoin mining and ICO activities within the country.
Further tightening followed in February, when the PBOC prohibited the issuance of unauthorized offshore yuan-pegged stablecoins and the unapproved tokenization of real-world assets. The move reflected a broader emphasis on maintaining monetary sovereignty and limiting financial experimentation outside state channels. The country’s trajectory toward a centralized, state-controlled digital fiat system has continued to influence how Chinese policymakers balance innovation with regulation.
Amid these regulatory headwinds, China has steadily advanced its own digital currency framework. The country is actively developing the digital yuan, a central bank digital currency (CBDC) managed by state authorities. This CBDC initiative is frequently cited as the centerpiece of China’s digital money strategy, positioning the digital yuan as a replacement or complement to traditional stablecoins as the regime’s preferred vehicle for digital payments and financial inclusion.
The SPC’s remarks come on the heels of ongoing cross-border enforcement activity that underscores the global dimension of crypto-related risk. In recent months, U.S. authorities pursued cases involving alleged crypto-linked schemes with ties to illicit operations. Notably, the U.S. Department of Justice seized about $15 billion worth of Bitcoin from a Chinese-linked operator in connection with a major investigation that has continued to unfold in the public record. Separately, a prominent Chinese-born executive associated with a regional business group faced arrest abroad and subsequent extradition to China on charges linked to operating illicit financial schemes. These enforcement actions highlight the intensifying cross-border cooperation and the reputational and financial risks that accompany crypto-related activity for multinational actors.
For investors and builders, the juxtaposition of stricter domestic adjudication standards and aggressive international enforcement signals a need for caution and precision. Clarity from the SPC could reduce ambiguity in civil litigation over crypto disputes, making it easier for market participants to assess risk, allocate liability, and determine remedies. At the same time, the broader push for CBDC development and the continued prohibition of unauthorized crypto activities suggest that China’s regulatory environment will remain bifurcated—supportive of technological advancement within a tightly controlled financial ecosystem, while restricting broader use of decentralized or offshore crypto instruments.
The central question in the near term is how the SPC will translate its research into concrete judicial interpretations. The timing of those guidelines could influence transactional risk, enforcement priorities, and the strategic decisions of firms operating in or with China’s digital economy. Observers should also monitor whether the ongoing cadence of cross-border enforcement actions or the CBDC push will shape a more predictable or more restrictive environment for crypto and AI-related activities in China. As the SPC moves from study to interpretable rules, the practical impact on disputes, compensation standards, and IP rights in crypto and AI will emerge more clearly.
This article was originally published as China’s Supreme Court to Review Crypto and AI Dispute Rules on Crypto Breaking News – your trusted source for crypto news, Bitcoin news, and blockchain updates.


