A major Chinese second-hand platform has sparked online controversy after allegedly requiring a mother to submit an uninterrupted five-minute video of herself slapping her child as a condition for processing a refund.
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The case drew public attention when Li Yun, the mother of an unidentified 11-year-old girl, tried to get a refund after discovering that her daughter had secretly spent over 500 yuan (US$70) on trading cards on the Qiandao app.
Qiandao is widely regarded as China’s leading platform for trendy second-hand toys and collectibles. It surpassed 10 billion yuan (US$1.4 billion) in total transaction volume in 2025.
On the platform, buyers and sellers trade collectable toys, cards and model figures.
The platform provides official verification and authenticity guarantees. It also enforces a policy that these products are not eligible for unconditional returns within seven days.

However, when Li contacted a seller to request a refund on a purchase her child had made just two hours earlier, the seller accused her of “pretending to be a minor to maliciously cancel orders.”