So far, China has maintained good relationships with 59 countries and 127 organizations to fight against cyber attacks. The international cyber space governing pattern proposed by China is also widely accepted and praised across the globe.
According to this pattern, countries around the world will reach consensus on the joint fight against cybercrime, and step up investigation assistance and information sharing on cybercrime cases.
In the area of e-business, China has made tremendous progress in the past decade. Alibaba Group, the country's e-commerce giant and the world's second-largest Internet company in market value, on its Tmall online marketplace has reported dazzling daily sales of 91.2 billion yuan ($14.3 bln) on this year's Singles' Day shopping spree, a 60-percent rise from last year's 51.7 billion yuan.
This success is built on strong technical support, which proves that China has become an inevitable power in this area.
Those accusations saying that China's Internet policies are not transparent or that the country advocates Internet censorship are entirely groundless, as the Chinese government has been working on an improved network environment.
Xi said that international cyberspace governance should feature a multilateral approach with multi-party participation, adding that "all countries should step up communication and exchange, improve dialogue and the consultation mechanism on cyberspace."
With all these efforts, China aims to build a platform for a global Internet shared and governed by all. The river town Wuzhen is a starting point.