Reserved IP Address°C
04-22-2025
BSV
$29.02
Vol 22.29m
-0.48%
BTC
$87952
Vol 36586.52m
0.59%
BCH
$345.32
Vol 168.97m
2.16%
LTC
$78.64
Vol 373.86m
-0.6%
DOGE
$0.15
Vol 1003.72m
-0.41%
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

China’s largest tech firms, including Tencent, Ant Group, Baidu, and JD.com, have signed a pact to stop the secondary sales of non-fungible tokens (NFTs) and to introduce self-regulation rules. 

According to a Reuters report, 30 companies and entities have signed the “self-regulatory initiative” is led by the Chinese Cultural Industry Association, pledging to collaborate to prevent speculation in digital collectibles. 

The self-regulation pact has a total of 14 articles that, among others, stipulate that digital collectible marketplaces should implement identity checks for users and should not “contain financial assets or unlicensed financial products, including securities, insurance, credit and precious metals, in blockchain-supported goods.” It also spelled out that digital collectible marketplaces must have relevant certifications, including those required for blockchain service providers, internet culture operators, and telecom business operators. NFTs must only be denominated in fiat and not digital currencies. 

Jin Peng, the secretary-general of the China Cultural Industry Association, noted that the pact could help the NFT industry contribute more meaningfully to the development of the real economy in China. The secretary added that it would also aid the use of digital collectibles to promote China’s excellent artistic culture. 

“Different from most foreign platforms that apply NFT technology as financial products, domestic digital collections are more regarded as the category of digital cultural creativity,” the secretary said. 

China’s official stance on digital collectibles

The industry-level initiative is in keeping with and affirming existing Chinese laws that ban speculation in digital assets. China has been implementing this ban across digital assets firms and block reward miners. However, it has allowed NFTs to thrive but warned against speculation or the involvement of digital assets in their trading. 

The accommodation of NFTs has spurred the exploration of NFTs and metaverse projects among Chinese tech giants. Ant Group and Tencent were the first Chinese companies to launch digital collectible platforms. JD.com followed shortly after, while Baidu has so far issued its own digital collectibles collection. 

Tencent has bigger plans to adopt digital collectibles. Last month, the internet and gaming giant revealed that it was setting up an extended reality unit to explore virtual reality and augmented reality technologies—innovations that form a backbone of the metaverse industry. 

This unit is to form a core aspect of its business as the company is looking to expand it despite cutting costs in other divisions. It will also be Tencent’s first foray into hardware. 

Watch: The BSV Global Blockchain Convention presentation, Buzzmint: Elevating NFTs

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ggbZ8YedpBE&t=12226s

Recommended for you

AI chip manufacturing derails climate progress in East Asia
A Greenpeace report has identified a spike in the electricity consumption rates of AI chip manufacturing by 350% since 2023...
April 22, 2025
Retail Associates champions cloud transformation for Philippine businesses with strategic SaaS event
The Strategic Shift 2025 event hosted by Retail Associates will happen at the Makati Sports Club on April 24, 9AM...
April 22, 2025
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement