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Virtual Theft, Real Power: China Redraws the Frontlines of Trademark Law -By Fransiscus Nanga Roka

Which is why this development regards the entire world. It reorients trademark law not simply about physical goods, but the transmission of economic significance itself. The war has been waged in the kingdom not of bookstores but browsers, neither cans nor jars but code; amid aisles made to glimmer and glow. However, the underlying question has been devastatingly unchanged who benefits from a reputation they didn’t earn?

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The digital economy has lived behind a convenient lie for years; that theft is less serious when it passes through the screen. In that fantasy world, cloning a brand in game or on-platform (or even perhaps within the metaverse capsule) might pass as mere copy-cat behavior, parodying mode and playfulness. China recent position and cuts through that illusion with almost brutal precision, making one point abundantly clear: virtual space can no longer be regarded as a legal backwater for real-world brand predation.

That development goes well beyond China. It marks the end of one of digital capitalism’s most cynical assumptions that, because tech mediated infringement is too new or disparate or woolly to be able to slow down enough for serious regulation. When courts realize that trademarks remain valid in the digital world, that excuse disappears. The fact that a logo ends up on an asset online without authorisation is not the hallmark of creativity in and of itself. It can be appropriation, disguise and deception masquerading as innovation.

This is where it gets politically and economically explosive. The struggle for virtual trademarks is not just a war of pixels on the screen. It is about control over consumer attention, market trust and commercial identity in the next era of web. Brands don’t contain value because of ink or packaging, they only have value in the way that they organize attention. And the nearest thing to sovereign currency in digital ecosystems is attention.

And this is exactly why infringement in virtual worlds has posed such a threat. It’s not just appropriating aesthetics when game devs or digital platforms copy branded elements without permission. The familiarity is not one that they had built so, I guess ultimately what they are doing in a way you could say monetizing it. They take a reputation of another person and turn it in commercial leverage that is immersive. Outside of the context of crypto, we would call that what it is: extraction.

We’re already familiar with the romantic rationalisation of this behaviour. Those against more aggressive trademark protection will respond that digital worlds are unique, ever-changing and collaborative; the users(sic) remixed culture; virtual objects express rather than sell. Some of that is true. But this fails to convey a more challenging reality. Once a virtual asset becomes at least partly market-facing bringing users, authority or exchange by means of an existing brand, it ceases to be innocent play. This transforms it into one tool on capturing economic power.

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The legal direction taken by China Léonard is coldly realistic the metaverse, gaming platforms and digital marketplaces are not autonomous universes above the law. They are profit systems. And profit systems (free of controls) soon become piracy for whoever is bold enough to cut corners and exploit loop-holes in the law. The remarkable thing is not that a court has set down any markers. Not that the line had been drawn on one of digital economy’s most lucrative behavior patterns: commercial imitation with a veneer of technological advancement.

It should unsettle the mythology of innovation without borders. The global tech industry is too often inclined to treat regulation as an impediment and enforcement as a reactionary practice. But what it really fears is accountability. Law will forever be behind monetization in their view, and so the virtual economy has at least largely been created on that false foundation. Fail fast, fix forever. Putting that formula has impacted everything from data extractions to AI trainings, platform dominancy. The pattern of trademark exploitation in the digital sphere is just another facade around this same opportunism doctrine.

There is, of course, a danger at the other end. Just as overbroad patent claims threaten innovative technological use by stifling the creation and dissemination of game-playing programs, there is no different theory in trademark that protects legitimate expressive commentary in jokes/pejorative artistic references/noncommercial uses or even parody. Not all imitation is infringement; not every virtual object, a counterfeit. However, that nuance should not serve as a cover for systematic abuse. We are lucid today in this caution and lying is the real threat. It is the corporate massification of illegitimate identity merger in systems constructed to occlude commerce, entertainment and bourgeois distinction.

And what China has realized and what many jurisdictions are still unwilling to admit is that virtual infringement is not a theoretically foreign concept. It is legally familiar. The tools maybe new, the screens more immersive and turnover rates by buy sell transactions that are fluid for funds but it is none the less good old market paraciting conduct. Trust is built by one person, but harvested by another.

Which is why this development regards the entire world. It reorients trademark law not simply about physical goods, but the transmission of economic significance itself. The war has been waged in the kingdom not of bookstores but browsers, neither cans nor jars but code; amid aisles made to glimmer and glow. However, the underlying question has been devastatingly unchanged who benefits from a reputation they didn’t earn?

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Gone are the glory days when digital innocence was quintessentially a Black and White issue. What virtual theft now resembles ever more closely is what it always originally was real world theft supported by real money in pursuit of actual power.

Fransiscus Nanga Roka

Faculty of Law University 17 August 1945 Surabaya Indonesia

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