Joy of Life's advanced on-demand resources could be watched for free on multiple online viewing platforms, such as Da Mi Planet Film and Television, Mi Gu Theater, and Zai Jia Film and Television. In addition, you can also watch Joy of Life's advanced on-demand resources through video platforms such as iQiyi and Youku.
Joy of Life's advanced on-demand resources could be watched for free on multiple online viewing platforms, such as Da Mi Planet Film and Television, Mi Gu Theater, and Zai Jia Film and Television. In addition, you can also watch Joy of Life's advanced on-demand resources through video platforms such as iQiyi and Youku. VIP members who had purchased the advanced VOD service could watch it on the VIP channel. If you want to purchase Joy of Life's advanced on-demand resources, you can purchase them on the relevant online viewing platforms.
Joy of Life's advanced VOD resources could be watched for free on multiple online viewing platforms, such as Da Mi Planet Film and Television, Mi Gu Theater, and Zai Jia Film and Television. In addition, you can also watch Joy of Life's advanced on-demand resources through video platforms such as iQiyi and Youku. VIP members who purchased the advanced VOD service could watch the advanced VOD content on the VIP channel.
Joy of Life's advanced VOD resources could be watched for free on multiple online viewing platforms, such as Da Mi Planet Film and Television, Mi Gu Theater, and Zai Jia Film and Television. In addition, you can also watch Joy of Life's advanced on-demand resources through video platforms such as iQiyi and Youku.
Joy of Life's advanced VOD resources could be watched for free on multiple online viewing platforms, such as Da Mi Planet Film and Television, Mi Gu Theater, and Zai Jia Film and Television. In addition, you can also watch Joy of Life's advanced on-demand resources through video platforms such as iQiyi and Youku. VIP members who have purchased the advanced VOD service can watch it in the VIP member area.
iQiyi introduced an advanced on-demand policy when it broadcasted Joy of Life, which meant that VIP members who had already paid an additional 50 yuan could watch six more episodes on the weekly update day, six episodes ahead of non-members. However, this move caused controversy and consumer dissatisfaction. The consumers felt that this pay-to-view model violated their legal rights and took iQiyi to court. In the first instance, the Beijing Internet Court found that iQiyi's advance on-demand behavior had damaged the rights and interests of the original members, and ruled that iQiyi Company would provide the original rights and interests of the gold VIP members to the plaintiff for 15 consecutive days and compensate the plaintiff, Mr. Wu. This ruling meant that iQiyi needed to cancel the advanced on-demand function and could not damage the existing rights of its members. Therefore, iQiyi lost the case.
The iQiyi platform launched a pay-per-view service when it broadcasted the TV series Joy of Life. This service required an additional fee to watch the series in advance. However, this move caused controversy, and some users felt that this violated their rights as Gold VIP members. The Beijing Internet Court heard the case and ruled that some of iQiyi's service agreements were invalid. The court also requested iQiyi to provide the original membership rights and interests to the plaintiff and compensate the plaintiff for the loss of 1500 yuan. The ruling attracted widespread attention because it wasn't the first time video websites had tried to pay for advance streaming, and similar cases had also caused controversy. In general, the Joy of Life case had been resolved legally, but the model was still controversial and discussed.
Joy of Life2 was scheduled to air around June 2024. The exact broadcast date had not been announced, but according to the actor Zhang Ruoyun, the second season was expected to air around June 2024. This news had already aroused the anticipation of countless fans.
During the broadcast of Joy of Life, iQIYI launched a "pay-to-view" service, which was considered to have violated the rights of Gold VIP members. The Beijing Internet Court confirmed in the first-instance judgment that some of the contract terms of iQiyi were invalid, and requested iQiyi to provide the original membership rights and interests to the plaintiff, and compensate the loss of 1500 yuan in the notary fee. The court held that although iQiyi could change the terms of the contract according to its own operating strategy, it should not harm the rights and interests of users. The judgment of this case showed that the healthy development and operation of the business model should follow the commercial terms and respect the user's feelings, and did not violate the relevant laws and regulations.
The Beijing Internet Court conducted a first-instance trial of iQiyi's Joy of Life advance broadcast case and pronounced it in court. The court found that part of iQiyi's iQiyi VIP Member Service Agreement was invalid, and the advance broadcast constituted a breach of contract. iQiyi was required to provide the plaintiff with VIP membership rights for 15 consecutive days and compensate the plaintiff for the loss of 1500 yuan in notary fees. As a Gold VIP member, Mr. Wu felt that his rights had been violated and sued iQiyi. iQiyi's advanced on-demand mode meant that VIP members could watch the series in advance, but they had to pay an additional fee. The court held that the advanced video-on-demand model itself was not inappropriate, but it should not damage the existing rights and interests of the members. Part of the content in iQiyi's VIP membership agreement excluded the user's main rights and failed to fulfill the reasonable obligation to inform, so it was deemed invalid. Overall, iQiyi's advanced on-demand mode was deemed a breach of contract, but the advanced on-demand mode itself was fine.
The iQiyi company's implementation of the "pay-to-view" method for dramas such as Joy of Life on the iQiyi platform it operated was considered to have violated the legal rights of Gold VIP members. The Beijing Internet Court ruled that "advanced on-demand" should not damage the existing rights and interests of members, and declared some of iQiyi's format clauses invalid. The court requested iQiyi to provide the original membership rights and interests to the plaintiff and compensate the plaintiff for the loss of 1500 yuan in notaries. The Plaintiff believed that the "paid advance on-demand" model violated the rights and interests of the Golden VIP members. This ruling was considered to limit iQiyi's "advanced on-demand" mode.