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Not representing Alibaba, what did Jack Ma say at the Internet Conference?

In the first session, Jack Ma introduced himself and his Alibaba to the world and let the world know Alibaba. He did not put forward too many new views, but this was also a way to get to know Jack Ma and get to know Alibaba again. Baba, I came here to promote myself.

In 2015, Jack Ma spoke at the Second World Internet Conference in Wuzhen: "This is an era that destroys you, but it has nothing to do with you; this is an era that robs you across borders, but you are unable to fight back. This is an era where you wake up too slowly, so you don’t even need to wake up. This is an era where it’s not that your opponent is better than you, but that you don’t even know who your opponent is. In this era of big crossovers, I warn you that only by continuous learning can you be invincible! You are still poor today because you doubt everything; if you dare not try anything, you will never achieve anything, and opportunities are always reserved for those who are prepared. ”

What Jack Ma is talking about is the changes in this era. Changes are too fast and there are too many innovations. The Internet accelerates this innovation. A large number of IT companies, such as anti-virus software, have changed from paid to free. If you still use the original products and services, there is no doubt that you have been destroyed, just like the emergence of 360 has made many anti-virus software disappear. Kodak and Nokia woke up too slowly. In the era of smartphone transformation, they held on to their inherent thinking. The price of such arrogance was heavy.

Jack Ma said that we should believe in technology, embrace technology, and should not be afraid that technology will impact our vested interests of yesterday and our habitual thinking. In the next 30 years, the Internet will no longer be an Internet for Internet companies, but an Internet for everyone. If the Internet has grown from nothing in the past 20 years, then in the next 30 years, the Internet will "come from nothing". This "nothing" is a ubiquitous "nothing". No one can exist without the Internet. In addition, instead of worrying about cyberspace and the digital economy, it is better to take responsibility.