Monday, July 28, 2025

PERSONAL REFLECTION: WHY I’M DEEPLY CONCERNED ABOUT INDONESIA’S DIGITAL SOVEREIGNTY





Over the past decade, especially through my role at www.idpro.id,  I've dedicated my professional life to building Indonesia’s digital infrastructure—ensuring our data center infrastructures, cloud systems, and digital policies serve the interests of our nation. But today, I write not just as an industry leader, but as a concerned Indonesian.


A recent reciprocal trade agreement between Indonesia and the United States includes a clause that could allow free cross-border transfer of Indonesian citizens’ personal data to the U.S.—with no clear legal safeguards or enforceable protection mechanisms. I heard the news on July 22nd 2025, and I was speechless.


This may sound like a technical issue. But it’s far more than that.
This is a direct threat to Indonesia’s digital sovereignty.


Data is Power. And Power Should Belong to the People.

In today's world, data is not a byproduct of technology—it is the new currency of influence. Our personal data reflects who we are:

  • Our health history
  • Our financial behavior
  • Our locations and habits
  • Our conversations, preferences, and beliefs

When such data is freely transferred to foreign jurisdictions, especially those without comprehensive national data protection laws like the U.S., we lose more than privacy.
We lose control.
We lose economic value.
We risk manipulation, surveillance, and digital colonization.


Why This Agreement is Dangerous

Let me be clear:
The United States does not currently offer an adequate level of data protection. Even the European Union has recognized this by refusing to grant the U.S. "adequate protection" status under GDPR.

Meanwhile, U.S. surveillance programs like PRISM and laws like the CLOUD Act allow American authorities to access data from any company under U.S. jurisdiction—even if that data is stored in Indonesia.

By allowing unrestricted data flow to the U.S., we are effectively handing over our digital identity to a foreign power, with no ability to intervene, audit, or enforce our laws.


What Digital Sovereignty Really Means

We must stop treating "digital sovereignty" as a buzzword. It has clear, non-negotiable pillars:

  1. Data Sovereignty
    Indonesian citizens' data must be governed by Indonesian law.
  2. Infrastructure Sovereignty
    Our critical data infrastructure must be physically located—and controlled—within national borders.
  3. Legal Sovereignty
    No foreign power should be able to access our data without going through the Indonesian legal system.
  4. Economic Sovereignty
    The value derived from Indonesian data—AI development, analytics, digital innovation—must benefit Indonesians, not be exported for others’ gain.


What We Stand For at IDPRO


At IDPRO, we believe in progress. We support responsible international collaboration. But we draw a hard line when it comes to giving away our national assets without protection.


We urge the government and relevant stakeholders to:

  • Reject any clause in international agreements that compromises our legal authority over Indonesian data.
  • Mandate selective data localization, especially for sensitive sectors like health, finance, defense, and government.
  • Strengthen and enforce Indonesia’s Data Protection Law (UU PDP No. 27/2022), including its extraterritorial provisions.
  • Provide incentives to build and maintain data centers within Indonesia, under Indonesian legal and operational control.
  • Foster a thriving data-driven innovation ecosystem in Indonesia, so we process and utilize our data here—rather than exporting raw digital material and importing finished technologies.


As someone deeply embedded in the digital world, I’ve watched nations rise or fall based on how they treat their data. Data is not just tech—it’s geopolitical leverage. It determines who builds the next generation of AI, who controls narratives, and who profits from innovation.

Indonesia has the talent. We have the market. We have the momentum.
What we must not lose is our agency.

This agreement with the U.S., if left unchecked, risks turning us into a data donor nation—one that feeds others’ advancements while stalling our own.

In the digital age, those who control data control destiny.
Let’s ensure that destiny stays in Indonesian hands. 


Thank you for reading. I write this as a citizen who cares deeply about the future of this country. If this resonates with you, let’s raise our voices together.

#DigitalSovereignty #IndonesiaFirst #ProtectOurData #IDPRO #DigitalIndependence

Wednesday, July 02, 2025

A Morning Near the Edge: A Gentle Reminder of Life’s Fragility MasyaAllah

 



June 27th, 2025—just after sunrise. The world was slowly waking, and I—as is my ritual—walked beside my father, whose steps have weathered 87 seasons of life. Each morning stroll is more than a habit; it's a sacred thread that binds generations, a quiet ode to time itself.

That morning, like many before, we greeted the day side by side. He met an old friend, exchanged gentle laughter, and the sky above us felt unremarkable—grey, cold, serene, unaware of what lay ahead.

But fate, in its subtle cruelty, knows no warning.

In front of my workplace (Bona Indah, Souh Jakarta(, his breath grew shallow, and his steps faltered. I caught his hand—cold, like the memory of another hand I once held, my late teacher, Debby Nasution, Rohimahullah whose journey ended with such chilling stillness. That same icy grip whispered of mortality.

Panic clawed at my calm. I was alone with him, helpless but not hopeless. As he whispered prayers between pale lips, I called my wife, asked her to bring the car—just in case. The thought of loss loomed large, uninvited and merciless.

Yet mercy arrived, quiet and steadfast.

We returned home, guided not just by instinct but by faith. A warm glass of water. A gentle massage. Patience. Prayers. And, as if by grace, the color returned to his cheeks, and the strength returned to his frame.

He is still here. Still breathing. Still praying.

This moment, fragile as it was, offered me a truth too often lost in the noise of daily life: we must make time for those we love—not when it is convenient, but when it matters. And every moment matters. The shadow of death walks silently beside us; it does not knock.

So I write this not out of fear, but out of reverence. For mornings like these. For second chances. For the sacred duty of presence.

Hold their hands while you still can. Walk with them. Listen to their stories. Let love be louder than routine.

Because life, in all its quiet beauty, is a fleeting breath—and we must cherish it before it slips into silence.