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But beneath the surface of these trending clips lies a complex interplay of technology, religion, law, and budaya malu (the culture of shame). To dismiss these viral moments as simply "bad behavior" is to ignore the seismic shifts occurring within Indonesia’s youth culture.
An ABG is a child. They are impulsive, curious, and terrified of adult judgment. When you click "share" on that video, you are not a moral guardian; you are a participant in child abuse. But beneath the surface of these trending clips
Recently, a case in West Java exemplified the pattern. A ten-second clip of sepasang ABG sitting closely in a public park during a school holiday went viral. There was no nudity, no explicit act—just proximity and a hand on a knee. Yet, the comments section exploded with demands for the police to arrest them for "perbuatan tidak senonoh" (indecent acts). They are impulsive, curious, and terrified of adult judgment
The internet has no amnesia, but Indonesian society offers no digital rehabilitation. Once a sepasang ABG is viral, they are permanently branded "nakal" (naughty or delinquent), reducing their future prospects for education and marriage. Social Issue #3: The Hypocrisy of Consumption While the public demands punishment, the data tells a different story. According to a 2023 study by the University of Indonesia’s Center for Social Psychology, 83% of viral ABG content is shared by adults aged 25–45. The same individuals who comment "Astaghfirullah" (Oh God, forgive me) are the primary distributors of the content. A ten-second clip of sepasang ABG sitting closely
Yet, the viral phenomenon suggests the opposite: rasa malu has not vanished; it has been externalized and weaponized. When a couple goes viral, the shame is not an internal moral check but a public flogging. The teenagers do not just fear disappointing their parents; they fear the "meme factory."
The knee-jerk reaction to criminalize teenage interaction highlights a national anxiety: the collision of Islamic conservatism, traditional adat (customary law), and the unstoppable force of globalized adolescent curiosity. 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.