LET'S VOTE FOR SATENET
Vote for Satenet - The Community Run Internet Service Provider #1466971
Internet connectivity is a force multiplier: more jobs, better healthcare access, improved education, and broader economic participation.
But millions of people in the developing world pay the world’s most expensive mobile data for unreliable service—because demand is high and infrastructure is scarce. Three billion people remain offline even where service is available.
The SateNet model changes the math. We help communities build wireless network services that they can manage as a self-sustaining, revenue-generating local asset. This means durable infrastructure with compounding impact.
https://foundation.mara.com/vote
About 17 hours left.
Why voting for Satenet: #1466971?
Voting for SateNet isn’t just about supporting another project—it’s about backing something real. Something grounded in the everyday challenges people face, especially in places where reliable internet still isn’t a given.
If you take a moment to read the original post here:
https://satenet.org
—you’ll see that SateNet isn’t coming from theory. It’s coming from lived experience. From communities that understand what it means to be offline, disconnected, or priced out of opportunity.
And that’s the thing—connectivity isn’t just about being online. It’s about access. Education. Inclusiveness. Earning. Communicating. It’s the bridge between isolation and participation in the global economy.
SateNet flips the usual model. Instead of waiting for big telecom companies to show up (or not), it enables communities to build and own their own connectivity—using satellite infrastructure and Bitcoin-based incentives. That changes everything. It means lower costs, local control, and systems that can actually sustain themselves over time.
There’s also a deeper alignment here with what the Global Bitcoin Community represent—a world where value flows peer-to-peer, where people contribute, learn, and build without needing permission. In fact, the whole idea echoes what’s already been proven in these decentralized spaces: you don’t need centralized institutions to coordinate value—you need incentives and participation.
Voting for SateNet is really a vote for that same philosophy—but applied to real-world infrastructure.
It’s not hype. It’s not abstract. It’s practical, local, and already aligned with how people actually live and adapt.
And honestly, if we want a future where access is built by communities—not handed down to them—then this is exactly the kind of project worth supporting.