Draft e-commerce law proposes 10 prohibited acts

The objective is to strengthen the legal framework to support sustainable sector development while protecting consumers.

An event to promote sustainable e-commerce in Hanoi. (Photo: VNA)
An event to promote sustainable e-commerce in Hanoi. (Photo: VNA)

Hanoi (VNS/VNA) - The draft Law on E-Commerce proposes 10 prohibited acts for online businesses amid the rapid growth of Vietnam’s e-commerce market and the increasing sophistication of violations, in a bid to strengthen the legal framework to support sustainable sector development while protecting consumers.

The prohibited acts include: using e-commerce to illegally raise capital; committing fraud or deceiving customers; providing false or misleading information during administrative procedures or when supplying data to state authorities; operating multi-level marketing schemes without a valid licence; trading or enabling trade in prohibited goods and services, counterfeit products, items infringing intellectual property rights, smuggled goods, products of unknown origin, expired goods, or goods that fail to meet quality standards; participating in e-commerce on platforms that do not meet Vietnam’s operational requirements; operating an e-commerce platform without completing required legal procedures; coercing or preventing users from registering with or using other platforms; employing algorithms or methods to restrict or prioritise product display without publicly disclosing selection criteria; and manipulating or concealing customer feedback, except where such feedback breaches the law or social ethics.

According to the Ministry of Industry and Trade, Vietnam’s e-commerce sector ranked third in Southeast Asia by market size in 2024 and fifth globally in growth rate in 2022. The retail e-commerce market expanded from 2.97 billion USD in 2014 to 25 billion USD in 2024, recording an average annual growth rate of 20–30% over the past decade. In 2024, the sector accounted for 10% of total national retail sales of goods and consumer services.

This growth has made Vietnam an attractive destination for foreign investment and has enabled Vietnamese consumers to become global buyers, accessing a wide range of domestic and international products. Many small and medium-sized enterprises have capitalised on modern platforms to expand distribution channels and reach broader markets.

However, alongside these opportunities, persistent issues threaten the sector’s integrity. Counterfeit goods, prohibited items, intellectual property infringements, and substandard products remain widespread in both traditional and online markets, with violations in the digital environment becoming increasingly complex. Regulatory authorities face difficulties in identifying sellers, which hampers the tracing and penalising of violators. These enforcement challenges heighten the risks of fraud, tax evasion, and insufficient consumer protection, according to industry experts.

Lack of transparency in seller information also undermines trust. When vendor details are incomplete or unclear, consumers cannot reliably assess credibility, which directly affects their rights and erodes confidence in e-commerce platforms.

Cross-border e-commerce has grown rapidly over the past decade, bringing additional layers of complexity to monitoring and enforcement. While this expansion offers significant economic potential, it also increases exposure to cross-border fraud, counterfeit goods, and jurisdictional gaps in enforcement.

The draft law reflects the need for a balanced approach, creating a robust legal framework that enables e-commerce to flourish while addressing its negative aspects. By combining measures to foster innovation and growth with strict enforcement against violations, Vietnam can ensure a secure, transparent, and competitive digital marketplace that protects both consumers and legitimate businesses./.

VNA

See more

Defendants at the court (Photo: VNA)

Ho Chi Minh City court opens trial over Agribank lending scandal

The investigation revealed that multiple credit files were incomplete or riddled with inaccurate information, while some pledged assets lacked proper legal standing yet were accepted and grossly overvalued. As a result, the loans became high-risk and largely unrecoverable, leading to losses surpassing 1 trillion VND.

Hanoi introduces 53 electric buses from April 18 (Photo: VNA)

Hanoi to add 53 electric buses from April 18

According to the plan, all buses operating within Ring Road 1 will use green energy by July 1, 2026. The requirement will expand to Ring Road 2 by January 1, 2028, and to Ring Road 3 by 2030.

Illustrative image (Photo: VNA)

National, local traffic safety committees to be dissolved from June 1

Under the dicision, ministries and ministerial-level agencies will assume responsibility for tasks previously performed by the committee, in line with their mandates under the Law on Government Organisation, the Law on Road Traffic Order and Safety, the Law on Roads and other relevant legal frameworks, ensuring that traffic safety and order are maintained without disrupiton.

Visitors explore technology showcases at the exhibition held during the Da Nang Startup and Innovation Festival (SURF 2025). (Photo: VNA)

About 10,000 students expected at National Startup Day 2026

This year marks the rollout of the “Student Startup Support Programme for 2026 – 2035”, approved under Decision No. 336/QD-TTg, which places emphasis on practical outcomes, real products, real testing, real partnerships, and measurable impact.

Hong Quang High School pilots teaching mathematics in English starting from the 2025–2026 academic year. (Photo: VNA)

National foreign language proficiency framework issued

The circular establishes a unified benchmark for foreign language proficiency across the national education system, providing a foundation for curriculum design, teaching, testing, assessment, and certification. It is expected to help learners better map out their language development pathways while enabling educational institutions to improve training quality and strengthen articulation between different levels of education.

Arrest warrants issued for Di and Dinh Yum, who are accused of abusing religious cover to undermine the State’s national unity policy (Photo: the Investigation Security Agency of the Gia Lai provincial Department of Public Security)

Two wanted for abusing religious cover to undermine national unity policy

The fugitives are Di (also known as Siu Di), born in 1941, and Dinh Yum (also known as Dinh Jum or Ba Koih), born in 1963, from Ba Na ethnic minority group in Gia Lai province, and hold Vietnamese nationality. They have been charged under Clause 1, Article 116 of the Penal Code for undermining the national unity policy.

Thach Phuoc Binh, Deputy Head of the Vinh Long delegation of National Assembly deputies, presents gifts to residents in Long Hiep commune on the occasion of the 2026 Chol Chnam Thmay festival. (Photo: VNA)

Support delivered to Khmer households for traditional New Year

The province's delegation of National Assembly deputies, in coordination with relevant agencies, presented 600 gifts across 11 communes, including 100 in Tap Son commune and 50 in each of the others. The programme, worth 300 million VND (11,300 USD), was funded by Agribank’s Vinh Long branch.