In a landmark move for digital governance, the Indonesian Ministry of Communication and Digital Affairs officially restored access to Elon Musk’s AI chatbot, Grok, on February 1, 2026.
The decision marks the end of a three-week suspension that made Indonesia the first nation to block the tool over concerns regarding the generation of non-consensual sexual deepfakes. However, the ministry has clarified that this “normalization” is strictly conditional and subject to rigorous, ongoing oversight.
The Compliance Agreement
The lifting of the ban followed a formal written commitment from X Corp to the Indonesian government, outlining concrete steps to align with national digital safety laws.
Layered Safeguards: X Corp reportedly implemented “layered” measures to prevent the creation of illegal content, specifically targeting pornographic material and imagery involving minors.
Restricted Features: Access to high-risk features—such as certain advanced image generation tools—has been restricted for users within the Indonesian jurisdiction to reduce the likelihood of misuse.
Incident Response: The company pledged to activate faster incident response protocols to permanently suspend accounts found creating or distributing harmful AI-generated content.
Strict Government Supervision
The ministry’s Director General of Digital Space Supervision, Alexander Sabar, emphasized that the restoration of services is not a “final clearance.”
| Regulatory Action | 2026 Status |
| Verification & Testing | Authorities are currently testing X’s claimed safeguards to ensure they effectively block illegal prompts. |
| Continuous Monitoring | The government will use automated tools to monitor the digital space for Grok-generated violations. |
| “Zero Tolerance” Clause | Any found inconsistencies or further violations will lead to an immediate and potentially permanent reinstatement of the ban. |
The “Domino Effect” in SE Asia
Indonesia’s aggressive stance in January 2026 triggered a “policy domino effect” across Southeast Asia, as neighboring nations grappled with similar deepfake concerns.
Malaysia: Also temporarily blocked Grok in January, but restored access last week after meeting with X representatives and receiving similar security assurances.
The Philippines: Currently maintains “strict supervision” over the tool, following the regional trend of placing higher accountability on Electronic System Providers (PSEs).
Global Precedent: Analysts suggest that Indonesia’s successful negotiation of a “written commitment” from xAI serves as a blueprint for other nations in the Global South looking to regulate Western AI models.
“The normalization of access… is the basis for evaluation, not the end of the supervision process. If inconsistencies are found, we will not hesitate to take corrective action.” — Alexander Sabar, Director General of Digital Space Supervision, Feb 2026






