Think of a world where each click, each message you send, and each transaction you make creates a value, but not for you, or even for your own country. Rather, this data is mined, stored, and capitalized upon by distant corporations and foreign governments that only leave behind surveillance, dependency, and an empty promise of progress. This is not a dystopian future. It is already the truth of much of the Global South today, where the imperial desires of the past have morphed into a quieter, yet equally extractive, project: the colonization of the digital sphere.
The twenty-first century has been accompanied by a new empire established not by ships or armies, but algorithms, servers, and surveillance. So-called “digital colonialism” is the takeover of the digital infrastructure, platforms, and data of developing countries by strong corporations and states, largely based in the Global North, who extract enormous value from the digital lives of others while leaving behind little benefit and even less autonomy. As scholars have pointed out, data has become as valuable a resource as land or oil, and yet its governance, ownership, and profit streams remain concentrated in the hands of a few.
Asia, home to more than half of the world’s population and some of the fastest-growing economies is both the biggest battleground and the greatest prize in this contest for digital supremacy. From India and Indonesia to Malaysia and Pakistan, the region’s populations generate staggering amounts of data every second. Nevertheless, this information and the network that it travels through are controlled elsewhere. India, for example, saw the approval of the Digital Personal Data Protection Act in 2023 as a major step towards fighting data extractivism, an indication that India is becoming more aggressive in the defense of its citizens, as well as data localization. Yet critics have noted that the law also expanded the government’s surveillance powers, doing little to curb the market power of foreign Big Tech.
Meanwhile, Indonesia banned TikTok’s shopping feature in 2023, citing concerns over the platform’s potential damage to local businesses and data sovereignty. Despite this, the country still remains deeply reliant on Chinese and American platforms for its digital economy. Even Malaysia and Pakistan, recipients of Chinese-funded smart city projects, have found themselves dependent on imported surveillance-heavy infrastructure that embeds foreign control into the very fabric of their urban spaces.
This asymmetry manifests itself everywhere. The information produced by Asian countries is used to make money by Google, Meta, Amazon, and Microsoft in Silicon Valley or Tencent and Huawei in Shenzhen. Governments that store their most sensitive information on Amazon Web Services or Microsoft Azure effectively outsource a part of their sovereignty, relying on foreign corporations to guard their digital fortresses. Cultural content and algorithms optimized for Western audiences marginalize local languages, identities, and traditions. Public discourse, manipulated by opaque algorithms, threatens to distort democratic debate and undermine accountability. It is not merely a question of who owns the servers or collects the data, but who wields power over the lives of billions.
What is at stake, then, is nothing less than the right of nations and peoples to chart their futures in the digital age. The undermining of sovereignty, the extension of economic dependence, and the proliferation of surveillance and manipulation are all features of an unequal digital order. The Global South may have won its independence on paper, but a quiet colonization of cyberspace has begun in earnest.
Yet this story need not end in despair. Across Asia, movements for digital sovereignty are gathering strength. India’s creation of homegrown platforms like Aadhaar, UPI, and the Open Network for Digital Commerce represents an effort to build public digital infrastructure that serves citizens rather than shareholders. Southeast Asian nations are working through ASEAN to develop regional frameworks to protect privacy and regulate data flows more fairly. Activists and scholars are still advocating for the use of open-source solutions, networks owned by the community, and more restrictive legislation to rein in the influence of foreign platforms. These are the first steps in what can still turn into an existential battle over digital independence. Digital colonialism is not just an Asian or Southern problem. As more countries adopt exploitative and extractive practices modelled after the powerful, global norms risk shifting further away from democracy and equality, and toward surveillance and domination. The fight for digital sovereignty in Asia is a fight for everyone, everywhere, who believes in the possibility of a free and just internet.
Asia stands at a crossroads. Will it embrace a future dictated by the interests of others, or will it reclaim its place as a leader and defender of its destiny? Just as postcolonial movements once fought to wrest back land and resources, so too must the peoples of the Global South now fight to reclaim their data, their platforms, and their voices.
The choices made today will determine whether the digital age becomes a new chapter in the story of freedom — or a darker sequel to the colonial subjugation of the past.
Featured/Headline Image Caption and Citation: Data, Image sourced from Wikimedia Commons | CC License, no changes made