A journal under the supervision of China's Supreme People's Court has published a statement: Digital transactions, electronic currencies, and virtual assets should be included in core legal issues.

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[China's Supreme People's Court-Supervised Journal Speaks Out: Digital Transactions, Electronic Currency, and Virtual Property Included in Core Legal Issues] Mars Finance reports that the authoritative journal *Digital Rule of Law*, supervised by China's Supreme People's Court, recently published its 2025 Issue 6 (Total Issue 18). This issue focuses on digital transactions, electronic currency, virtual property, generative artificial intelligence, and data element governance. Several articles directly address fundamental institutional issues related to blockchain and crypto assets, signaling a clear acceleration in the improvement of digital asset legislation. In the "Overseas Observations" section, the articles systematically review the 2022 revisions to the U.S. Uniform Commercial Code (UCC), focusing on electronic contracting, electronic currency, distributed ledger-based virtual property, and the new form of property rights, "controllable electronic records." The articles argue that the UCC's institutional design regarding the circulation, control, security, and bona fide acquisition of virtual currency offers significant insights for China's digital asset and blockchain legislation. Furthermore, several articles in this issue focus on topics such as generative artificial intelligence training data, data portability, public data, autonomous driving and intelligent connected vehicles, and digital copyright protection, emphasizing the need for institutional restructuring to balance technological innovation, market efficiency, and rights protection in the context of rapid technological evolution. Analysis indicates that *Digital Rule of Law*, as an important theoretical window within the Supreme People's Court system, focuses on digital transactions, electronic currency, and virtual property, demonstrating that these issues have moved from the academic forefront to the core of judicial and institutional design, providing important policy and theoretical references for the future improvement of rules related to blockchain, digital assets, and Web3.

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