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Whose work is it, really? Patent ownership in China

26 June 2026

Whose work is it, really? Patent ownership in China

Whose work is it, really?

Patent ownership in China when your employee leaves for a competitor.

 

A rivalry between two Shenzhen tech firms has escalated into a courtroom battle over former employees, patent ownership and the boundaries of corporate innovation, as Cathy Li explores how China’s “service invention” rules could reshape competition in the consumer-tech industry.

 

 

What began as a business rivalry between two of Shenzhen’s best-known consumer-tech firms has now escalated into a courtroom battle. A conflict over patents, talent and ownership.

In the span of four days last July, two companies headquartered across town from each other in Shenzhen’s Nanshan district launched what amounted to a mutual invasion. On July 24, 2025, DJI announced Osmo 360, stepping directly into the panoramic camera segment where Insta360 had established a leading position. Four days later, Insta360 teased its Antigravity drone sub-brand and the A1, its first consumer drone, plunging into the market where DJI has held a dominant position for a decade. 

About eight months later, they were in court.

The lawsuit was filed before the Shenzhen Intermediate People’s Court in China on March 23, 2026. It marks the first time DJI has pursued domestic patent-ownership litigation, centring on six patents covering drone flight control, structural design and image processing. But the underlying question is: when a senior engineer leaves one rival for another, how much of what they know belongs to the company they are joining, and how much remains, legally, with the one they left?

Public records have drawn attention to differences in inventor disclosure across jurisdictions. TheCover.cn and other outlets reported that in at least two Chinese filingstied to the dispute, inventors were listed as requesting their names not be published, while corresponding PCT filings disclosed inventor names, an issue DJI has cited in arguing that former DJI engineers may have been among the inventors. Jingkang Liu, Insta360’s founder and CEO, has denied the nondisclosure was intended to conceal former DJI involvement.

Insta360 founder Jingkang Liu wrote on Weibo in response to DJI’s accusations. He briefly stated that the idea originated from him while he was still working at DJI and addressed the issue regarding the omission of the patent inventor’s name.

When a market leader initiates patent litigation against the second-place player, its objectives typically extend beyond simple infringement remedies and incorporate multiple competitive strategy considerations,” said Eunice Yan, a partner at ZhiHeng Law Firm in Shenzhen.

 

Whose idea was it?

The legal question turns on China’s rules for service inventions. Article 6 of China’s Patent Law defines service inventions and assigns the right to apply for a patent to the relevant entity. The Implementing Regulations issued by the State Council, revised in 2023 and effective January 20, 2024, extend that concept to inventions made within one year after an employee leaves a company, if they relate to duties or tasks assigned by the former employer.

Liu responded to the suit within hours on Weibo, rejecting DJI’s claims and saying that if DJI wanted the patents, they could have asked. He said Insta360 reviewed patents filed by former DJI employees and concluded the ideas were developed internally. He added that Insta360 sometimes withholds inventor names in domestic filings to reduce headhunting risk and said some inventions, such as a one-button “building dive” flight-control concept, were not implemented in products. Insta360 also denied deliberately concealing inventors, noting the same practice applies to patents unrelated to former DJI staff, and said the disputed patents are not core to operations.

“This was my idea, and I was deeply involved in refining and approving it. Under current flight restrictions, this patent isn’t very useful, so the feature wasn’t implemented. If DJI wanted this patent, they could’ve just asked me for it,” said Liu. “However, when we are sued, we should spend money. To protect our legitimate rights and interests, we spent more than US$10 million to win the GoPro case overseas. This time, we have the same mentality.”

A legal distinction between “court scheduling” and “substantive trial” has come into focus as a patent battle between two of Shenzhen’s best-known consumer-tech firmsmoves through the Chinese judicial system.

On April 3, Wen Qin, a lawyer at Yingke Law Firm in Shenzhen, explained to a local Chinese news outlet TheCover.cn that scheduling a case for a hearing is not the same as trying it on the merits. “Scheduling simply means the court has placed the case on its docket, set a specific date and venue and issued summonses to the parties,” she said. “It signals that the case has entered the trial preparation phase.”

A screenshot from the World Intellectual Property Organization’s Chinese website shows that the inventor is not named. 

The one-year window

At the heart of the dispute is a critical question: what counts as a “service invention” made within one year of an employee’s departure?

The answer matters greatly because, under Article 13(1) of the Implementing Regulations, a patent deemed a service invention may belong to the former employer rather than the company that later filed it.

“This case marks the first patent ownership lawsuit ever filed by DJI within China,” said Yan.

Yan explained that DJI is not accusing Insta360 of “copying,” but rather fighting over rightful ownership. She noted that ownership suits require only proving a link between an employee’s departure date and the patented technology to trigger a presumption of service invention, a much lower evidentiary burden than trade secret infringement, which demands multiple layers of proof.

If DJI wins, it would obtain the patents directly, potentially transferring ownership of patents tied to Insta360’s drone business. A trade secret win, by contrast, would typically only yield injunctions or damages, not ownership. Strategically, Yan added, reclaiming the patents through ownership litigation would disrupt Insta360’s research and development (R&D) rhythm and market expansion, delivering a more direct competitive impact.

In practice, according to Qin, courts weigh several factors: the departing employee’s specific responsibilities and assigned tasks; how the disputed patent relates to those tasks; whether the former employer had conducted relevant R&D; and whether the patent holder or named inventors can provide a reasonable explanation for how the technology was developed.

On April 3, DJI told TheCover.cn its interpretation of the law, arguing that the one-year rule is necessary to protect corporate R&D investment. DJI cited China’s rules on service inventions, under which inventions made within one year of leaving, and related to prior work or assigned tasks, may qualify as service inventions belonging to the former employer.

“This one-year rule is, in essence, a legal ‘cooling off period’ designed to protect corporate R&D investment,” a DJI representative said. “If a researcher left today and could file a competitor’s patent tomorrow using technology still ‘warm’ from their previous job, then years of R&D and hundreds of millions in investment would be left unprotected.”

A specific detail in the patent records has sharpened DJI’s position. On at least two of the disputed Chinese filings, Insta360 requested that inventors’ names not be published, a permissible practice under Chinese patent procedure. When the company filed corresponding international applications under the Patent Cooperation Treaty, the names appeared in full. According to the South China Morning Post, DJI has presented that discrepancy as evidence that the individuals whose names were not disclosed in the domestic filings were former core engineers from its drone division. 

Liu rejected that interpretation directly. “Several patents unrelated to former DJI employees were similarly filed with non-disclosed inventors,” he wrote on Weibo. Liu explained Insta360 withholds inventor names in domestic filings as a matter of policy to deter headhunting, a practice applied across all filings, not only those involving ex-DJI personnel. “If our motive were as DJI claims, we wouldn’t have used these names at all,” he pointed out.

In response to Liu’s public statement that the creative concept for the disputed patent originated from him personally, a DJI representative told TheCover.cn that the legal standard for determining a service invention is “whether it is related to the work at the original employer,” not “who the first source of the idea is.

“Legally, in domestic applications, based on the requesting applicant, a request to not disclose the inventor’s name can be made, but in international applications, such a request option does not exist; therefore, in international applications, signing the true name also complies with legal requirements, and there is no legal impropriety,” said Yongwen Wang, a partner at Johnson IP in Shenzhen.

“A patent ownership dispute concerns a disagreement over who owns a patent. It is different from a patent invalidation proceeding, which attacks the validity of specific patents. Generally, if a dispute can be resolved through ownership litigation, the latter strategy (invalidation) is not pursued. Invalidation requires evaluating whether prior art evidence can invalidate the relevant patent. Regardless of whether the patent can be invalidated or not, an ownership dispute can potentially transfer 100 percent of the patent rights to the claimant. In contrast, an invalidation proceeding does not necessarily succeed in invalidating the patent in question. Before filing a lawsuit, DJI could have searched prior art to assess the stability of the relevant patents,” Wang said.

He explained that in an ideal world, a company’s accumulation of core technology patents should be positively correlated with its market performance. For both investors and regulators, he noted, “the quality of a patent portfolio should matter more than its quantity” because that is where real value lies.

Wang added that lawsuits like the DJI-Insta360 dispute are “not uncommon in the day-to-day movement of inventors between companies.” For employers whose inventors leave, he explained, it is worth monitoring any patents filed within one year of employees’ departure or retirement. “This is a rule of ownership explicitly granted by law,” he said, “and it is right for the former employer to assert its claim.”

Conversely, Wang cautioned that companies hiring researchers should be careful when listing as an inventor someone who has been with the company for less than one year. “Unless the technology is unrelated to the researcher’s duties at the previous employer, any patent application filed by the new company runs the risk of being claimed by the former employer,” he said.

 

Lessons from the past

The Shenzhen court will not assess these arguments in isolation. Two decisions of the Supreme People’s Court, one of which has been designated as a formal guiding case, set out the analytical framework that the panel will almost certainly apply. Together, they illustrate the respective legal exposure of each party.

The closer precedent, and the one DJI’s lawyers are more likely to cite, is Shenzhen Weibond Technology v. Li Jianyi (2019). Li, a former Weibond employee, filed a patent for a medical dispensing device just three months after leaving the company, then transferred it to a separate entity, of which he had long been the legal representative and majority shareholder. His defence tracked the arguments Insta360 is now making – he claimed independent development from publicly available materials, denied meaningful involvement in Weibond’s R&D, and produced a technical comparison to distinguish his patent from his former employer’s earlier filings. The Shenzhen Intermediate Court ruled against him, the Guangdong High Court affirmed, and the Supreme People’s Court dismissed his retrial application.

What decided the case was not the job title but documentary proximity to the work. Although Li held a production and manufacturing role rather than an R&D position, Weibond produced his signature on technical drawings, procurement forms for R&D, and records of his participation in engineering discussions. That paper trail was, in the courts’ assessment, sufficient. The Supreme People’s Court formalized this reasoning into a four-factor test now treated as a guiding doctrine: the specific contents of the employee’s duties; the relationship between the disputed patent and those duties; whether the former employer conducted relevant R&D; and whether the patent holder can offer a credible account of independent development. Each of those four factors is squarely in dispute here.

The structural parallel to the DJI case is worth noting. Li transferred his patent to a related entity he controlled, a move courts treated as circumstantially significant. The gap between Insta360’s domestic filings, which withheld inventor names, and its PCT applications, which disclosed them in full, may carry similar weight: not as evidence of wrongdoing, but as a fact that invites explanation and that a court is unlikely to set aside.

The second case cuts the other way. In Zhejiang Chunfeng Power v. Segway (2022) – involving CFMoto, a Chinese vehicle manufacturer – a former CFMoto engineer, whose responsibilities centred on overall vehicle R&D, was sued after filing a patent on air filters at his new employer. The former employer argued that air filter development fell within the same broad technical field as automotive R&D. The court rejected that framing: it was not appropriate, the ruling held, to expand the technical field of a specific automotive component into the broader automotive category. Proximity to a general domain is not enough; the connection must track a specific technical responsibility.

That distinction carries direct implications for Insta360. DJI’s six patents span three distinct domains: flight control algorithms, structural architecture and imaging systems. If the engineers at the centre of the dispute worked primarily in one domain and the patents they filed at Insta360 cover another, the 2022 ruling provides a credible basis for arguing the one-year presumption should not apply. Courts consider multiple factors, including the specific content of the employee’s prior work; the technical relationship between that work and the disputed patent; whether the former employer conducted R&D in the same area; and whether the patent holder can offer a credible account of independent development. Judicial practice, Qin noted, is meant to balance protection of former employers’ legitimate rights against interpretations so broad they would chill the normal movement of R&D talent.

Taken together, the precedents suggest that the outcome will turn less on reasonably settled legal doctrine than on the granularity of the evidentiary record. Not whether these engineers worked in DJI’s drone division, but what, specifically, they worked on, and how precisely the disputed patents track that specific work. Internal emails, laboratory notebooks, design review records and system access logs will matter more than either side’s public statements.

Yan said intellectual property protection has become a major area of competition among Chinese companies as state enforcement efforts intensify.

Citing the Huawei-Xiaomi dispute as an example, Yan noted that in September 2023, the two companies announced a global patent cross-licensing agreement. Both issued similar statements saying they had been actively negotiating patent licenses and that China’s IP protection system offers diverse resolution mechanisms, including administrative and judicial mediation. According to Yan, both Huawei and Xiaomi view mediation as an effective channel to facilitate licensing and believe that IP licensing and cooperation promote innovation and the public interest.

Yan also pointed to the dispute between Hai Robotics and Geek+, two Chinese warehouse robotics companies. In March 2023, a patent infringement dispute between them reached the Intellectual Property Tribunal of the Supreme People’s Court on appeal. According to Yan, the presiding judge noted multiple unresolved disputes between the two companies nationwide, including pending patent infringement lawsuits, related administrative patent invalidation cases and disputes still before the national IP office.

The panel of judges decided on a “mediation‑first, simultaneous hearing and mediation” approach, Yan said. The court drafted preliminary settlement terms for both sides, which included framework clauses to guide future negotiations and cooperation. Both companies accepted the court’s proposal. On the morning of November 15, 2023, they signed a settlement agreement, resolving all 11 active lawsuits in a single package.

Yan said the court was concerned that constant litigation in an emerging industry could squander first-mover advantages and harm both the companies and the broader market.

 

The competitive market

In public messaging, Insta360 also suggested it could respond more aggressively. According to China Daily, Yue Yuan, head of Insta360’s China operations, said an internal assessment found the disputed technologies could be covered by 28 Insta360 patents, spanning hardware and structural design, software methods, control systems and accessories.

Market-share claims in the panoramic and action-camera space are not consistently reported across firms. One industry report relayed by 36Kr describes sharply different market-share outcomes depending on the research provider, including estimates from Jiqian Consulting and Frost & Sullivan. This underscores that some widely circulated percentages cannot be treated as settled facts without access to underlying datasets. 

Separately, China Daily reported that, according to market research firm IDC, DJI and Insta360 ranked first and second globally in the handheld camera market in 2025, with market shares of 62.4 percent and 20.4 percent, respectively. The report also said Insta360 maintained a leading position in the panoramic camera segment, with shipments rising nearly 60 percent year-on-year and market share reaching 66 percent.

Insta360’s publicly reported financial scale also contrasts with DJI’s estimated size. For example, Forbes reported Insta360 posted Rmb5.6 billion (US$819.9 million) in revenue and Rmb994.7 million (US$146.3 million) in profit, citing prospectus disclosures tied to its 2025 listing. 

DJI’s revenue is not publicly reported because DJI is privately held.

 

Why market leaders sue

Litigation can reshape the competitive dimension by shifting the focus from price to technology and compliance, raising rivals’ R&D and compliance costs through patent barriers. It can also disrupt financing, listings or product launches by injecting uncertainty into a competitor’s operations. Beyond the courtroom, such lawsuits may influence suppliers, distributors and other supply chain partners to act more cautiously. In sectors with overlapping technologies, litigation can also become a pathway toward cross-licensing, technical cooperation or broader commercial settlements.

Yan noted that in head-to-head competition among industry leaders, patent litigation is not merely a legal tool for rights protection; it is an extension of competitive strategy, functioning across dimensions such as controlling market tempo, managing supply chain relationships and increasing leverage in business negotiations.

Turning to how Chinese courts handle such disputes, Yan said that while they take the market background into consideration, they adhere to a prudent principle of “legal judgment first, market factors second.” A court will consider the parties’ market positions to understand the context, but at the core of its ruling, it focuses strictly on technical claim construction, patent validity and element-by-element infringement analysis. The court will not be swayed by “who is number one in the market.” Instead, it strives to strike a balance between rigorous protection of technological innovation and maintaining a fair competition order.

On one hand, Yan observed, courts remain vigilant against “batch litigation” lacking a substantive rights basis or malicious pressure tactics, curbing improper lawsuits. On the other hand, while recognizing the exclusive nature of patent rights, if the case involves standard‑essential patents or a refusal to license, courts may introduce competition law perspectives to prevent the exercise of patent rights from morphing into market monopolization.


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