Indonesia’s GoTo Group Launches Quantum-Resistant Cybersecurity Suite for Ride-Hailing and E-Commerce Ecosystem
Indonesia’s GoTo Group, parent company of Gojek and Tokopedia, has rolled out a new quantum-resistant cybersecurity suite to protect its 60 million monthly users across Indonesia, Singapore, and Vietnam. This marks the first such deployment by a Southeast Asian technology company…

By
Tom Whitmore
Published
Dec 4, 2025
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1 min

Indonesia’s GoTo Group, parent company of Gojek and Tokopedia, has rolled out a new quantum-resistant cybersecurity suite to protect its 60 million monthly users across Indonesia, Singapore, and Vietnam. This marks the first such deployment by a Southeast Asian technology company.
The new suite, developed in partnership with Japan’s NTT Data and South Korea’s AhnLab, uses post-quantum cryptographic algorithms designed to withstand future threats from quantum computers. GoTo’s cybersecurity team says the upgrade is crucial as cyberattacks increase across the region.
The company revealed that attempted data intrusions on its platforms rose 38 percent in the past year, driven by new malware strains targeting fintech and e-commerce apps. The system protects passwords, ride-hailing data, delivery routes, and payment authentication processes.
Beyond encryption, the suite includes AI-driven threat modeling, real-time identity spoofing detection, and behavioral analytics across all user sessions. This will help secure GoPay, one of Indonesia’s most widely used mobile wallets.
Cybersecurity analysts say GoTo’s move could influence other regional giants like Grab, Shopee, and Lazada, which have yet to adopt quantum-resistant frameworks. Singapore’s Cyber Security Agency is also evaluating the standards GoTo adopted.
The initiative strengthens GoTo’s reputation after a challenging 2023, when the company underwent restructuring. With digital services growing in Indonesia, security enhancements are expected to boost customer trust and compliance readiness for upcoming data regulations.

Written by
Tom Whitmore
Senior correspondent · Technology & Energy
Tom trained as an electrical engineer, which makes him unusually patient with infrastructure stories. He reports on AI, cloud, the energy transition, and the businesses turning frontier engineering into real cash flow. Previously he covered the chip supply chain from Taipei. Skeptical of slide decks; comfortable in a substation. Based in Singapore. Reach out at tom.whitmore@theplatinumcapital.com.




