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2025 World Internet Conference Wuzhen Summit concludes with major achievements

Visitors enter the Light of Internet expo venue at the World Internet Conference in Wuzhen, east China's Zhejiang Province, on November 7, 2025. /VCG
Visitors enter the Light of Internet expo venue at the World Internet Conference in Wuzhen, east China's Zhejiang Province, on November 7, 2025. /VCG

Visitors enter the Light of Internet expo venue at the World Internet Conference in Wuzhen, east China's Zhejiang Province, on November 7, 2025. /VCG

The 2025 World Internet Conference Wuzhen Summit, held under the theme "Building an Open, Cooperative, Secure, and Inclusive Digital and Intelligent Future – Together for a Community with a Shared Future in Cyberspace," successfully concluded its agenda on Sunday in east China's Zhejiang Province. Over 1,600 guests from more than 130 countries and regions attended in person, charting a new blueprint for a brighter digital and intelligent future.

The summit achieved numerous significant outcomes and reached broad consensus. The "Light of Internet" expo was also a major success, featuring over 100 interactive exhibits and drawing over 17,000 visitors in a single day.

A wide array of important achievement documents and reports were released during the 24 sub-forums covering five major fields: development and cooperation, technology and industry, humanities and society, governance and security, and artificial intelligence.

Two critical blue books – the China Internet Development Report 2025 and the World Internet Development Report 2025 – were major highlights of the summit. The reports collectively emphasize the trend of AI shifting towards full-domain empowerment.

The China Report notes that AI in China is accelerating its integration with the real economy, with large models prioritizing inference efficiency. It also points out that China holds 60 percent of the world's AI patents. The World Report underscores the global breakthroughs in AI development, highlighting multimodal large models as a frontier and the growing importance of embodied intelligence in sectors like manufacturing and healthcare.

"AI is moving from simple technical breakthroughs to large-scale application innovation, driving the deep integration of technology with industry and promoting high-quality development," said Ma Hongbin, president of Kuaishou Technology, which recently released its Kling 2.5 Turbo service that can generate film- and TV-level videos.

Furthermore, the World Report stressed that AI regulation and governance remain core issues for global cyberspace governance, calling for increased international cooperation to ensure AI benefits humanity in a safe, reliable and sustainable manner.

The continuous release of these blue books, now for nine consecutive years, remains a vital contribution of the Wuzhen Summit to global internet research and development.

(Peng Yuhan and Wang Chulun contributed to the story.)

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