Ngintip Link Link |top| May 2026

Ngintip Link Link |top| May 2026

Ngintip Link Link |top| May 2026

Feature: “Ngintip Link Link”

Kasus 1: Bocornya Link Try Out CPNS Berbayar

Pada tahun 2023, sebuah bimbingan belajar (bimbel) online menjual link try out CPNS dengan harga Rp150.000. Seorang peserta berhasil "mengintip" link tersebut melalui bot Telegram dan menyebarkannya ke grup gratis. Akibatnya, bimbel tersebut rugi hingga ratusan juta rupiah. Pelaku dilaporkan ke polisi dan dijerat Pasal 33 UU ITE.

Why the Repetition (“Link Link”)?

Indonesian internet slang often repeats words for: ngintip link link

  • PluralityLink link = “multiple links” (vs. standard Indonesian tautan-tautan).
  • Playfulness – Adds a casual, friendly tone.
  • Emphasis – “Those specific links we’re all curious about.”

Similar repetitive slang: makan makan (casual eating), jalan jalan (strolling), but link link is purely digital-age. Feature: “Ngintip Link Link” Kasus 1: Bocornya Link

Reporting plan / Sources

  • Interviews
    • Victims of scams and content distribution (3–5)
    • Former or current moderators/content reviewers at major messaging/social platforms (2–3)
    • Cybersecurity researchers specializing in link-based malware and tracking (2)
    • Legal expert on Indonesian digital law and international content takedown (1)
    • Representative from a local consumer-protection NGO (1)
  • Technical research
    • Crawl and analyze a sample of public channels/groups where “Ngintip Link Link” appears (ethical, no scraping of private data).
    • Use safe, sandboxed analysis of URLs (open-source intelligence, malware sandbox) to identify payloads, trackers, redirect chains.
    • Consult third-party threat reports and malware/abuse databases.
  • Document review
    • Platform transparency reports and policy documents.
    • Relevant laws/regulations in Indonesia and neighboring jurisdictions.
  • Data requests
    • Contact platforms for comment and potential takedown statistics.
    • Request anonymized incident data from NGOs and cybersecurity firms.

Breaking Down the Phrase

  • Ngintip (or intip) – Indonesian for “to peek” or “to sneak a look.”
  • Link – English word for a hyperlink (URL), widely adopted into Indonesian internet slang.
  • Link link – Repetition for emphasis, implying “various links” or “the links in question.”

So, "ngintip link link" literally means “peeking at the links” — but in practice, it refers to secretly viewing or accessing shared links without openly interacting (e.g., without commenting, liking, or replying). Plurality – Link link = “multiple links” (vs