Digital Economy and Digital Transformation Review https://scientium.co.id/journals/index.php/deditr <p>This special issue invites papers that investigate how technological innovation and digital transformation contribute to business practices and performances across different industries, countries and regions, and how consumers respond to, involve and interact with such changes. We welcome all types of papers (e.g., conceptual, quantitative and qualitative) that offer new theoretical insights into managing and sustaining technological development, innovation and digital transformation in the post-pandemic era, particularly in the tourism sector.</p> <p>Topics covered:</p> <p>These may include (but are not limited to):</p> <p>The role of big data analytics in generating customer insights.<br />Technological innovation and digital transformation strategies for the tourism, hospitality and service industries.<br />The role of digitalisation in international business and marketing.<br />The role that technological innovation played in sustainable marketing and consumption.<br />Enablers of and barriers to technological innovation and digital transformations.<br />Social impacts and ethical issues of technological innovation and digital transformations. <br />The dark side of AI technology in decision making and service recovery.</p> en-US editorial@scientium.co.id (Mochamad Nuruz Zaman) journal@scientium.co.id (Ryan Saputra Alam) Thu, 08 May 2025 17:22:53 +0000 OJS 3.2.1.2 http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss 60 Income Tax Law Reconstruction in Addressing E-Commerce Abuse as the Transaction Proceeds of Crime https://scientium.co.id/journals/index.php/deditr/article/view/574 <p><em>The exponential growth of Indonesia's e-commerce sector—projected to reach US$95 billion by 2025—presents both economic opportunities and regulatory challenges. This study explores the legal nexus between digital income generation and tax compliance, emphasizing the vulnerabilities of e-commerce platforms to various forms of financial fraud and income tax avoidance. Utilizing a normative juridical method under an interpretive paradigm, the research analyzes prevailing income tax laws and their limitations in addressing digital-era fraud, including identity theft, phishing, cybercrime, and misuse of digital financial services. The study identifies the insufficiency of existing legal instruments—particularly secondary rules—in fully capturing the scope of digital transactions and proposes a legal reconstruction of income tax laws. Drawing on H.L.A. Hart’s theory of law as a system of primary and secondary rules, the analysis highlights critical gaps in rule of recognition, rule of change, and rule of adjudication within current Indonesian tax law frameworks. The study concludes by recommending doctrinal reform to reinforce legal clarity, regulatory enforcement, and transnational coordination in the taxation of digital economic activities.&nbsp;&nbsp; </em></p> Didit Santoso, Yudha Pramana Copyright (c) 2025 Digital Economy and Digital Transformation Review https://scientium.co.id/journals/index.php/deditr/article/view/574 Fri, 30 Dec 2022 00:00:00 +0000