Original Authors: Xu Qian and Jin Weilin
Recently, a typical enforcement case reported by the Beijing Higher People’s Court has attracted widespread attention. The case clearly includes live streaming income, digital collectibles, and other online virtual assets within the scope of enforceable property. This judicial practice provides an innovative approach to solving the “difficulty in enforcement” problem.

After a contract dispute case involving an industrial company and Wang was brought into enforcement proceedings, the court checked the control system and found that Wang had no real estate, vehicles, bank deposits, or other traditional assets available for enforcement. The case was temporarily concluded at that point.
Later, the applicant for enforcement discovered a lead: Wang has been engaged in diamond sales and live commerce activities on a certain streaming platform, with a fixed account and earnings. This lead was submitted to the Beijing Court’s “Enforcement Property Clue Transfer Center” and quickly transferred to the Fengtai District People’s Court in Beijing.
After verification, the court issued a “Notice of Assistance in Enforcement” to the platform operator, legally freezing and deducting about 200,000 yuan of Wang’s live streaming income from his account. After the funds were transferred, both parties reached a settlement agreement to offset the remaining debt with future live streaming commissions in installments. The successful handling of this case provides a practical example for similar new types of property enforcement cases.
Online virtual property possesses both “virtuality” and “property nature” attributes: the former determines its mode of existence and enforcement path, while the latter provides the legal basis for it to be considered responsible property.
1. Virtuality
Unlike traditional property, virtual property in the network has three core elements:
Legal basis:
Article 127 of the Civil Code of the People’s Republic of China states: “Where the law provides for the protection of data and online virtual property, such provisions shall apply.” This clause explicitly affirms the legal protection status of data and online virtual property in civil law.
2. Property Attributes
Although virtual, online virtual property has the three core features of property:
Therefore, virtual property with these attributes qualifies as responsible property, and courts can enforce measures against it accordingly.
Judicial practice is continuously expanding the types of virtual property subject to enforcement:
1. Digital assets: such as digital collectibles (NFTs), etc.
2. Accounts and virtual items: high-value social media accounts (e.g., TikTok, WeChat public accounts); virtual gifts from live streams; high-level game accounts and rare equipment; valuable domain names.
3. Income rights and operational rights: platform store operation rights; membership rights with property attributes, etc.
4. Data assets: legally owned databases and customer information assets with commercial value.
The criteria are as previously mentioned: whether they have clear property value, can be effectively controlled, and can be legally appraised and realized.
Based on the above property attributes, besides the case mentioned at the beginning, judicial practice has explored various effective enforcement paths:
1. Direct auction and realization
The People’s Court of Linshui County, Sichuan Province, auctioned a top-tier game account of an enforcer on a judicial auction platform, which sold for 213,000 yuan, successfully realizing the asset. 【(2025) Sichuan 1623 Enforcement 961】
2. Debt offset with assets
In a labor dispute case between Zhou and Zhuzhou Trading Co., Ltd., after negotiation, the enforcement applicant agreed to accept the enforcement of the company’s live streaming account to settle the entire debt. After transferring account rights, the case was closed.
For creditors and lawyers, the following strategies can be adopted:
Step 1: Clue discovery—investigate whether the enforcer is involved in:
Don’t just focus on traditional assets like real estate or cars. The debtor might be hiding wealth on their phone. Key areas to investigate include:
Step 2: Target identification—submit “precise clues” to the court
Finding clues is just the beginning; submitting them to the court is crucial.
Step 3: Tailored enforcement application based on “property”
Different types of virtual property require different enforcement approaches. When submitting applications to the court, be specific:
Step 4: Platform cooperation—clarify legal obligations
Court judgments require platform cooperation to be truly effective. We need to promote proactive actions from courts:
Summary:
From discovering clues to final funds recovery, the process is clear: Find person and property → Submit to court → Classify and apply → Platform cooperation.
Each step requires strategy and patience, but with proper methods, virtual assets can also become an effective means for creditors to realize their rights.
The Beijing High Court case sends a clear and important signal: virtual property is no longer just a string of code on a screen but is protected by law as “real assets.”
The normalization of virtual property enforcement is an inevitable step forward in judicial progress. It extends legal reach into the digital world and ensures that the value of every digital labor has a solid legal backing.
Related Articles
The White House will review the new proposed market measures put forward by the US CFTC
Crack down on illegal black markets! The UK considers opening up the gaming market to accept cryptocurrency payments
The US CFTC will open trading for "perpetual contracts," with guidelines to be announced within a month.
FATF warns about the risk of sanctions evasion when trading P2P with stablecoins
ECB Warns Stablecoin Adoption Could Drain Bank Deposits
Trump Supports the "GENIUS Act" and the "Clarity Act": Criticizes Banks for Obstruction and Calls for Accelerating the U.S. to Become the "Global Crypto Capital"