"We believe in an open, transparent and above all safe Internet," Li said on the sidelines of a Chinese-created Internet conference.
"That requires an Internet shared and governed by all -- all stakeholders equal," he added, in comments made to representatives from US chip maker Qualcomm and professional networking site LinkedIn.
Li met with China's top Internet company bosses as well as officials from foreign firms and industry groups in the eastern city of Hangzhou.
Human Rights group Amnesty International has called the conference an attempt by Beijing to spread its model of strict Internet supervision to the world.
China's Communist rulers also block some Western media websites and bar services from Internet giants Twitter, Facebook and YouTube.
Li acknowledged the benefit of e-commerce as an engine of China's economy, but called for "order" in the freewheeling Internet.
"Without order, the Internet would not be a safe and credible place," he said.
"We're going to have a global version of Taobao, which enables say, customers in the Philippines to get in touch with suppliers in Argentina," he said, but gave no concrete details of the plan.
The platform currently accounts for over 90 percent of consumer-to-consumer transactions in China.
But Taobao's foreign efforts to date have focused mainly on overseas Chinese communities, company officials have said.
Ma is a Chinese Internet success story, with Alibaba recently listing on the New York Stock Exchange in the world's biggest IPO to date.
"We're going through some difficult discussions now," he said, but gave no details.
Li replied: "I believe the opportunities in China will be greater than the challenges.
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