Judges join livestreaming to auction seized goods


Almost all Chinese courts have registered on the judicial sales platform of Taobao, the shopping site of Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba, since the service was launched in 2012. The courts have auctioned assets ranging from diamonds, cars, land use and Boeing 747s to company shares.
Online auctions can help save time and service fees for bidders and at the same time increase transparency and prevent under-the-table deals in legal affairs, according to the Suzhou Industrial Park People's Court in Jiangsu province.
A total of 566,000 items have been auctioned, with the turnover reaching about 1.3 trillion yuan on the Taobao judicial sales platform, where 3.43 million buyers have registered, according to the platform.
More people can participate in judicial auctions through the internet, especially livestreaming platforms, which helps raise the success rate of transactions and the premium rate, Jin said.
"We have also introduced the work of courts and the rules of judicial auctions to the public through the platforms," Jin added.
XINHUA
- Bolivian diplomat praises peony forum for cultural exchange
- Unitree CEO gives lecture to Zhejiang officials on robotics
- New research questions dark energy's constancy
- China-SCO trade hits record $890 billion
- Beijing postpones human-robot race to April 19 due to weather
- Shanxi entrepreneurs innovate to counter trade impacts