The news hits like a shockwave through Southeast Asia’s startup ecosystem: Nadiem Makarim, the charismatic founder of ride-hailing giant Gojek, has been sentenced to 12 years in prison for his role in a sprawling corruption scandal. The verdict, delivered by a Jakarta court on Thursday, marks a watershed moment for tech governance in the region. But for those of us who have long advocated for a more cautious, ethically-grounded approach to innovation, this is not merely a story of individual fall from grace. It is a vindication of the British model of tech regulation, a quiet but firm assertion that accountability must keep pace with disruption.
Let’s start with the facts. Makarim, once hailed as the “Elon Musk of Indonesia,” was found guilty of bribing government officials to secure favourable contracts for Gojek, as well as laundering millions through shell companies. The case, which has been under investigation for three years, peeled back the layers of a culture where hyper-growth was prioritised over governance. It’s a familiar story in Silicon Valley’s extended orbit, where the mantra “move fast and break things” has often left regulatory and ethical debris in its wake. But this time, the consequences are more than reputational. They are criminal.
The contrast with British tech governance could not be starker. Here, we have built a system that balances innovation with oversight. The Financial Conduct Authority’s sandbox for fintech, the Information Commissioner’s Office’s robust enforcement of data protection laws, and the Competition and Markets Authority’s vigilance against anti-competitive practices all create an environment where startups can thrive without trampling societal norms. Yes, we have our scandals, but they are met with swift institutional response rather than impunity. The Gojek case proves that when regulation is treated as an afterthought, the result is a rot that spreads from the C-suite to the streets.
But let us dig deeper. What does this mean for the user experience of society? Makarim’s crime was not just about money; it was about eroding trust. For millions of Indonesians, Gojek was a lifeline: affordable rides, food delivery, and digital payments in a chaotic urban landscape. Now, that trust is shattered. The app may still function, but every transaction carries a whiff of corruption. This is the hidden cost of unbridled capitalism: the erosion of social capital. In Britain, our regulators understand that trust is the currency of innovation. Without it, the whole system collapses.
Proponents of the “disruption at all costs” model will argue that Makarim’s case is an outlier, a few bad apples in a barrel of progress. But that is a dangerous delusion. The same lack of oversight that allowed Gojek’s corruption to flourish is present in countless startups across Asia and beyond. The question is not whether another scandal will break, but when. British tech governance offers a counterpoint: a framework that embeds ethics into the product cycle, from quantum computing to AI ethics boards. It’s not perfect, but it is a bulwark against the kind of hubris that landed Makarim in jail.
For the broader tech community, this is a moment of reckoning. The era of the founder as infallible visionary is over. We must pivot to a model where governance is not an obstacle but a feature of innovation. The British approach, with its emphasis on digital sovereignty and user protection, provides a roadmap. It’s time for the rest of the world to take note. The view from London is clear: in the race between technology and regulation, we must ensure that neither runs too far ahead. Because when they do, we all pay the price.









