Abstract
Indonesia’s information governance landscape is undergoing a new transformation phase with the new nomenclature of the Ministry of Communications and Digital (Komunikasi dan Digital/Komdigi). This structural shift should be able to answer the real challenges they previously faced and what lies ahead. In this regard, those challenges will be discussed through a four-way framework of digital infrastructure: data, intermediaries, content, and access. It evaluates existing policies and identifies implementation gaps that would lead to a more inclusive and effective digital ecosystem. Several challenges remain in data protection, platform governance, and content moderation. The enactment of Indonesia’s Personal Data Protection Law has its enforcement problem because the sub-regulation is yet to be stipulated. On the other hand, the growing influence of digital platforms demands a proper response in balancing innovation, security, and user rights. Meanwhile, content moderation policies still carry the same problem of ambiguousness with the government intervention that is always waiting at the corner. Accessibility gaps also demand a continuous effort to ensure equitable internet access nationwide. The article sees that information governance requires a more holistic approach to avoid regulatory fragmentation. Komdigi should also enhance trust from the public, ensuring an impartial law implementation. By guaranteeing transparency, accountability, and a rights-based approach, Indonesia can foster a resilient and sustainable digital environment aligned with its long-term vision, Visi Indonesia Digital 2045.