An important milestone for Indonesia is approaching in 2045. This period marks 100 years since independence, and the country’s main aim is to become a highly developed country with increased income levels, better career opportunities, and an improved international status due to tech advancements, such as digitization.
However, the increased usage of technology presents various security issues associated with cybercrime and cyber-attacks which might interfere with the process and affect the economy adversely. Therefore, the implementation of a cybersecurity strategy is required.
Vision 2045 is also referred to as ‘Golden Indonesia 2045,’ with the objective of making the nation a sovereign, advanced, equitable, and developed nation. In doing so, the strategy focuses on having increased per capita income, low poverty rates, competitive industries, and a skilled workforce.
The core aspects include social transformation, growth in new sectors in the economy, development in infrastructure, and optimal use of natural resources. Technology will help in achieving this objective through the provision of better services and processes in production. Secure digital systems therefore remain necessary because any major disruption could delay these targets.
Cyber resilience ensures systems consistently work during attacks, adapt proactively to problems, and return to recover quickly to full functionality. This idea links closely to national goals since many Vision 2045 targets depend on reliable online networks. Banking, government portals, supply chains, and energy systems all require reliable, secure data transfer.
Digital security connects to national goals most critically, since attacks can disrupt business operations, erode trust in public services, and undermine investor interest.
Therefore, building strong defenses brings several benefits. Companies can keep operations running, whilst supporting job growth. Government services remain available so citizens receive help without delay. The economy gains stability when incidents cause limited harm. Additionally, safer conditions allow new ideas to emerge in areas such as digital payments and connected factories. These steps reduce risks and support steady movement towards the 2045 targets.
The use of the internet has grown quickly across the country. Many people now handle daily tasks through mobile applications, and important sectors use cloud services and connected equipment. This change opens doors for development but also widens possible points of attack.
The main challenges include a shortage of trained experts, fragmented regulatory frameworks across government agencies, and inconsistent security practices in day-to-day operations. Some organizations continue to treat cybersecurity as a purely technical concern rather than a strategic priority. Previous data breaches and service disruptions have exposed systemic gaps. Constrained budgets and legacy infrastructure in parts of the public sector compound these difficulties further.
Positive developments appear too. Legislation governing personal data protection and the security of critical infrastructure has been established. The National Cyber and Crypto Agency leads monitoring and response activities. More companies show interest in organized security steps. Training efforts and public campaigns have begun to reach larger groups and lay groundwork for wider changes.
Government direction provides critical guidance. A comprehensive national cybersecurity strategy can define clear roles, set priorities, and establish timelines for action across different fields. Agencies can update rules to match present threats and push for uniform standards. Regular checks on important infrastructure help find problems before they grow. Shared monitoring facilities and response groups improve overall readiness.
Cyber risk management in Indonesia works better when organizations treat it as part of normal operations. Companies need to list key assets, assess potential threats, and implement measures tailored to their specific situation. This governs access controls, data protection methods, and security testing through simulated exercises.
Larger organizations can exchange threat details with regulators in safe ways. Smaller firms gain from clear guides and lower-cost options. Groups in the same sector, such as finance or manufacturing, can meet to align their approaches and address shared risks. Cooperation between public and private sides speeds up the use of balanced standards that support both security and business goals.
Tools matter, but skilled people form the main defense. Indonesia can grow training in schools, higher education, and job programs to increase the number of qualified workers. Basic awareness sessions for staff and the public help avoid common errors that cause problems.
Paths to recognized qualifications and real exercises keep professionals updated on new threats. Joint efforts between government and industry on training support or short work placements can help. Ongoing learning allows teams to handle new tools, including those that use artificial intelligence to spot dangers.
Updated solutions add strength when selected with care. Layers of protection — including network controls, device safeguards, and continuous monitoring — work together. Approaches that check every access request limit unnecessary exposure. Cloud options with built-in security features enable growth without incurring high additional costs.
Automated containment mechanisms and well-tested backup and recovery processes are particularly valuable in limiting and reversing damage. Local efforts to create security solutions suited to local conditions can grow through dedicated centres. Regular checks make sure new additions do not create unexpected weaknesses.
Such areas support each other. The government provides the structure, businesses put the respective measures into daily use, people carry out the tasks, and technology supplies the means. Gradual rollout across sectors inevitably creates the strength needed for Vision 2045.
What Indonesia Can Learn from Other Countries
Several international models offer adaptable lessons. Singapore has developed strong public-private partnerships alongside robust workforce development programs. South Korea protects critical infrastructure through dedicated agencies and regular simulation exercises. Estonia embedded security into its digital identity systems by design from the outset.
Common threads across these examples include clear governance structures, sustained investment in human capital, and effective mechanisms for sharing threat intelligence domestically and internationally. Indonesia can draw selectively from these approaches, tailoring them to its scale, regulatory environment, and current stage of digital maturity.
Future actions begin with completing and sharing a full national cybersecurity strategy. Further steps include updates to laws for smoother coordination, additional resources for the main agencies, and countrywide training initiatives. Test projects in selected sectors can demonstrate results before broader rollout. Periodic reviews will keep efforts aligned with Vision 2045 targets.
Breaches that go uncontained, legacy systems that are left unpatched, and skilled professionals who remain untrained bring the ‘deadline’ to Vision 2045 closer without the progress it demands. Cyber resilience is therefore, undoubtedly, a foundational infrastructure for everything Indonesia intends to build.
IndoSec is where strategy meets the people who execute it. Now in its eighth edition, the summit brings together over 2,000 senior practitioners, policymakers, and decision-makers for two days of focused dialogue on the threats and strategies that matter most to Indonesia right now — from critical infrastructure protection and zero trust adoption to cloud risk and national incident response frameworks.
Agenda Highlights
Event Details:
Date: 15–16 September 2026
Venue: The Ritz-Carlton Jakarta, Pacific Place
The people shaping Indonesia’s cyber future will be in that room. Make sure you are too!
For more information about the event, visit: indosecsummit.com
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