Suhaily Amri Hasibuan
Universitas Islam Negeri Sumatra Utara

Published : 4 Documents Claim Missing Document
Claim Missing Document
Check
Articles

Found 4 Documents
Search

Hyperconnectivity and Spiritual Alienation: An Islamic Epistemological Approach to Cyberspace Ethics Suhaily Amri Hasibuan; Rubino; Muhammad Randicha Hamandia; Zhila Jannati
Jurnal Administrasi Pemerintahan Desa Vol. 7 No. 2 (2026): August
Publisher : Indonesian Journal Publisher

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.47134/villages.v7i2.517

Abstract

This study examines the ethical crisis of hyperconnectivity and its implications for spiritual alienation within contemporary cyberspace. It argues that digital platforms are not neutral communication channels, but socio-technical environments shaped by algorithms, visibility, speed, and symbolic power. Through a qualitative library research design, this article analyzes recent national and international scholarship on digital ethics, Islamic epistemology, cyberculture, intrapersonal communication, and spiritual well-being. The study employs reflexive content analysis, critical discourse analysis, and philosophical hermeneutics to interpret the relationship between digital overload, post-truth communication, and the weakening of the qalb. The findings indicate that hyperconnectivity produces cognitive fragmentation, dependence on external validation, and a reduction of reflective practices such as tafakkur, muhasabah, and dhikr. To address this crisis, the article reconstructs Islamic communication ethics through the integrated lenses of Bayani, Burhani, and Irfani epistemology. Bayani ethics strengthens verification and truthful speech; Burhani ethics cultivates critical algorithmic literacy; and Irfani ethics protects spiritual intention and self-discipline. The study proposes a Theocentric-Anthropocentric model of cyberspace ethics, positioning digital interaction as a moral responsibility before God, the self, and society. This framework offers a spiritually grounded alternative to secular digital ethics by prioritizing truth, dignity, wisdom, and public benefit in online life today.
Institutionalization of Algorithmic Tabayyun: Integration of Maqashid Sharia as the Philosophical Foundation for Regulation of Transnational Media Platforms Suhaily Amri Hasibuan; Hasan Sazali; Muhammad Randicha Hamandia; Zhila Jannati
Jurnal Administrasi Pemerintahan Desa Vol. 7 No. 2 (2026): August
Publisher : Indonesian Journal Publisher

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.47134/villages.v7i2.520

Abstract

The rapid growth of synthetic media, deepfakes, generative artificial intelligence, and transnational platform algorithms has produced a crisis of digital authenticity, where public communication is increasingly shaped by opaque systems that blur truth, manipulation, and fabrication. This study formulates Algorithmic Tabayyun as a normative framework for Islamic communication ethics and transnational media governance. Using qualitative library research, critical discourse analysis, and thematic Qur’anic interpretation, it examines synthetic media, algorithmic accountability, platform regulation, and Maqasid Sharia. The findings show that secular regulatory models remain limited because they frame digital harm as technical, administrative, or post-facto legal problems, while overlooking moral responsibility, human dignity, public reason, and corporate intention behind engagement-driven algorithms. Algorithmic Tabayyun expands Qur’anic information verification from individual ethics into institutional mechanisms requiring source validation, algorithmic transparency, bias detection, and social impact assessment. By integrating Maqasid Sharia, it protects reason, religion, dignity, privacy, and wealth from misinformation, hate speech, reputational harm, and surveillance capitalism across national, regional, and global regulatory contexts today. These reforms strengthen accountability within contemporary digital societies
Algorithmic Authority and the Commodification of Religion: A Literature Review of the Shifting Islamic Broadcasting Ecosystem in the Artificial Intelligence (AI) Era Suhaily Amri Hasibuan; Hasan Sazali; Muhammad Randicha Hamandia; Zhila Jannati
Jurnal Administrasi Pemerintahan Desa Vol. 7 No. 2 (2026): August
Publisher : Indonesian Journal Publisher

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.47134/villages.v7i2.523

Abstract

This study examines the transformation of Islamic Communication and Broadcasting in the era of Artificial Intelligence by focusing on algorithmic authority, religious commodification, and ethical crises in post-truth digital media. Using a qualitative library research design and critical discourse analysis, this article analyzes recent academic literature on AI-based da’wah, digital religion, platform capitalism, religious authority, and Islamic communication ethics. The findings show that AI and platform algorithms do not merely function as technical tools for producing and distributing religious content; they also act as curatorial powers that shape visibility, legitimacy, and public trust in Islamic messages. This transformation shifts religious authority from sanad-based scholarly transmission toward algorithmically amplified popularity, creating risks of misinformation, sensationalism, and weakened epistemic responsibility. The study also finds that Islamic broadcasting is increasingly absorbed into the logic of digital commodification, where religious symbols, sermon clips, and preacher branding are repackaged as attention-based commodities. In response, this article proposes a critical-paradigmatic reconstruction of Islamic Communication and Broadcasting through AI literacy, ethical platform governance, maqaṣid-oriented digital infrastructure, and social-impact-based evaluation. The success of digital da’wah should therefore be measured not only by virality and audience reach, but also by truthfulness, moderation, verification, social cohesion, and spiritual responsibility
Communication Anxiety Management in Islamic Missionary Organizations: A Literature Study on Communication Effectiveness in the Hyperconnectivity Era Ahmad Sofian; Suhaily Amri Hasibuan; Anang Anas Azhar; Elfi Yanti Ritonga; Muhammad Randicha Hamandia; Zhila Jannati
Jurnal Administrasi Pemerintahan Desa Vol. 7 No. 2 (2026): August
Publisher : Indonesian Journal Publisher

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar

Abstract

The contemporary world creates challenges for Islamic preachers due to constant global connectivity and the rapid circulation of false information. This study examines how da’wah communicators manage anxiety while delivering religious messages in digital spaces. The research applies a qualitative library method by reviewing scientific journals, theoretical books, and academic publications on communication psychology and digital media published between 2020 and 2026. Content analysis and hermeneutic criticism are used to interpret the data, while Western communication theories are combined with Islamic interpretative perspectives. The findings show that many preachers experience anxiety that is not merely ordinary nervousness, but may develop into serious psychological pressure. This anxiety is shaped by difficult social situations, external expectations, public judgment, and the visual culture of digital media. Therefore, da’wah activists need to transform their organizational practices by integrating psychological strategies and spiritual values. Cognitive restructuring can help reduce stress, while tawakkal and qaulan sadida strengthen sincerity, ethical speech, and emotional stability. This study proposes an integrative framework for managing internal thought and external communication.