Wu said that Guo Zhilong from the Institute of Cyber Law at China University of Political Science and Law said that at least four cases in the newly launched case database of the People's Court recognized the property attributes of virtual currencies such as Bitcoin; Che Hao from the Law School of Peking University said that digital currency has a relatively small space in my country's legal order, but it has not been completely banned. It is not contraband and can in fact be traded and has economic value, so it can be identified as property; Li Yong, director of the Legal Policy Research Office of the Nanjing People's Procuratorate, said that the digital age has arrived, and it is reasonable to identify digital currency according to international transaction prices, and he recognized that digital currency has property attributes.