When Komdigi Goes Off Track

Endri Elhanan
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Komdigi was designed to manage digital communication, yet many claim it has drifted away from its core functions. Discover how this impacts governance, society, and digital ecosystem in this in-depth critical review.

Where communication moves at speed of light, committees like Komdigi (Digital Communication Committee) were created to bridge gap between policy, technology, and public. Their original mission was clear: to facilitate digital transformation, regulate fair use, and ensure transparency in information ecosystem.

But over time, whispers have turned into loud criticisms: Komdigi is drifting away from its intended role. Instead of safeguarding communication channels and empowering citizens, it risks becoming a bureaucratic body that protects power rather than people

Where Komdigi Lost Its Way

1. Over-Regulation Instead of Empowerment

Instead of enabling digital growth, Komdigi often leans toward excessive regulation. Policies framed as “security measures” sometimes turn into tools of control, limiting freedom of expression and stifling online innovation.

2. Serving Political Interests

Komdigi’s neutrality is being questioned. Too often, its actions align with protecting political narratives rather than serving broader digital community. When committees prioritize power over people, they betray their founding purpose.

3. Neglecting Digital Literacy

While misinformation and cybercrime grow rapidly, Komdigi spends less effort on education programs for citizens. Instead of equipping people with tools to stay safe online, focus shifts to restricting access a reactive approach rather than proactive.

4. Bureaucracy Over Innovation

Digital transformation demands agility, but Komdigi often drowns in bureaucracy. Approval processes, red tape, and outdated methods slow down very innovation it was meant to foster.

Komdigi was created to protect, regulate, and empower. But when it goes off track, cost is borne by very citizens it was meant to serve. Drift from empowerment to control, from transparency to bureaucracy, is a dangerous one.

👉 Explore more critical insights on governance, cybersecurity, and digital ecosystems at our blog: Dark OSINT Blog

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