When traditional networks collapse, satellite connectivity becomes the lifeline. A Tehran-based journalist recently revealed that mobile networks and landline infrastructure went completely offline in their region—even emergency services couldn't get through. Yet communication continued flowing through Starlink.
This real-world scenario highlights why decentralized network infrastructure matters. In crisis situations where centralized systems fail, alternative connectivity solutions prove their worth. The ability to maintain information flow when conventional channels are down demonstrates the resilience of satellite-based networks.
For the Web3 community, this serves as a practical reminder: infrastructure redundancy and censorship-resistant connectivity aren't just theoretical benefits—they're operational necessities.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
17 Likes
Reward
17
5
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
GetRichLeek
· 5h ago
Now it's good. Real-world scenarios have proven that what I previously boasted wasn't empty talk. Is the opportunity to buy the dip in satellite concept coins coming?
View OriginalReply0
SchrodingerAirdrop
· 01-10 07:50
Really, when centralized networks go offline, everything collapses. At this point, decentralized infrastructure becomes a lifeline.
View OriginalReply0
LightningWallet
· 01-10 07:44
This thing in Tehran is really incredible. At a critical moment, Starlink came to the rescue... Isn't this exactly what we've been hyping up finally coming to fruition?
View OriginalReply0
TxFailed
· 01-10 07:39
ngl, starlink clutching it when everything else dies is exactly the kind of edge case nobody wants to test in production. Tehran journalist just got a live demo of why redundancy isn't optional—learned that the hard way, apparently.
Reply0
HashRateHustler
· 01-10 07:34
Starlink this move is truly brilliant; in critical moments, decentralized infrastructure is still essential.
When traditional networks collapse, satellite connectivity becomes the lifeline. A Tehran-based journalist recently revealed that mobile networks and landline infrastructure went completely offline in their region—even emergency services couldn't get through. Yet communication continued flowing through Starlink.
This real-world scenario highlights why decentralized network infrastructure matters. In crisis situations where centralized systems fail, alternative connectivity solutions prove their worth. The ability to maintain information flow when conventional channels are down demonstrates the resilience of satellite-based networks.
For the Web3 community, this serves as a practical reminder: infrastructure redundancy and censorship-resistant connectivity aren't just theoretical benefits—they're operational necessities.