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Indonesia’s Electronic Information and Transactions (ITE) Law, often called the "cyber-pasal" (cyber article), was designed to protect citizens from defamation and fake news. However, it has become a weapon for moral policing.

Moving past taboos to provide teenagers with scientific, empathetic guidance regarding boundaries, consent, and relationships.

Shifting netizen culture from "destroying" to "educating." Conclusion

The Information and Electronic Transactions Act (UU ITE) and the 2008 Pornography Law are frequently invoked in these cases. Ironically, these laws are written so broadly that teenage victims of leaked media are sometimes criminalized alongside the uploaders for "distributing indecent content."

If you are interested in exploring how these social issues are being handled in different regions, or if you'd like to dive deeper into the legal repercussions for these young individuals, please let me know. Share public link

Many Indonesian teenagers understand how to use social media, but lack comprehensive digital literacy. They frequently fail to grasp the permanence of the internet. Consensual media shared in private relationships is often weaponized after a breakup (revenge porn) or leaked via hacked accounts, transforming a private mistake into a national public scandal. The Abstinence-Only Sex Education Vacuum