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As we pointed out in China’s SaaS Market: WFOEs Need Not Apply and again in Foreign SaaS in China: Get Off of My Cloud, current regulations in the PRC do not permit foreign entities to make direct sales of SaaS products from servers located within China. For foreign software companies, this is a major issue since the trend is decidedly towards SaaS products.
What is to be done? For many years, foreign software developers simply held off on the China market, assuming that if China’s regulations did not change some clever “back door” method would be found to escape the regulatory burden.
During the past several years, foreign software developers have started to deal with the PRC regulations directly. Since China will not permit direct sales of SaaS product from servers located within China, the foreign software developer has two difficult alternatives. The first is to maintain its software on a foreign server and sell into China under the threat of being blocked at any time by the Great Firewall. The second is to license the software to a Chinese entity under threat that its software will be “appropriated” by the licensee. Both alternatives face the further difficult issue of accurately monitoring the validity of payments from the Chinese side.
Both alternatives are unattractive. However, in a world of difficult alternatives, a choice has to be made. To paraphrase the great American philosopher Tom Waits: The two roads are both dead ends, but you still have to choose. In this post I will assume that the idea of giving the entire software bundle over to a Chinese entity is too hard to handle for a start. So we will begin this series with a discussion of the first alternative where the software remains safely on a server located outside of China.
When the SaaS software is located outside of China, there are three fundamental issues. First, what should be done about the Great Firewall and the threat of being temporarily or permanently blocked? Second, how will the software be marketed? Third, how will the customer pay for the software? After many experiments the major developers have essentially settled on the following basic system for selling business software in China:
This basic description of the process shows the critical role played by the reseller. The reseller performs two critical functions in this system. The reseller takes personal liability for the software product and ensures that taxes are paid on the income earned from the software sales. Attempts to work around this system virtually always fail. For example, many foreign software developers are willing to hire a Chinese sales entity, but they want payments to be made directly to them, with no involvement by the reseller. This type of arrangement is open tax evasion and will never be permitted by the Chinese authorities. The only system that will work for any major sale of business software is a system where where liability falls on a Chinese reseller and where China taxes get paid.
But for software developers who are serious about China, this model has two fatal flaws. First, as noted, access to the foreign server can be blocked by the Great Firewall at any time. This risk is well known. There is, however, a second and more important problem. Most large companies in China are owned or controlled by the Chinese government and these SOEs (State Owned Enterprises) are effectively prohibited from using SaaS software hosted outside of China. Even large (and many small) private companies have a strong preference for using only of software hosted in China, both for technical and for political reasons. Therefore, any software developer seriously intending on taking advantage of the China market needs to have its software hosted in China. Like it or not, this means using the licensing model I will look at in my next post.
The post Selling Software as a Service (SaaS) in China: The Foreign Server Option appeared first on China Law Blog.
We will be discussing the practical aspects of Chinese law and how it impacts business there. We will be telling you what works and what does not and what you as a businessperson can do to use the law to your advantage. Our aim is to assist businesses already in China or planning to go into China, not to break new ground in legal theory or policy.