Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
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The Forgotten Risk, Will Deepening the Dissolution of the World Internet Put the
by
Kagaru
on 04/09/2025, 17:13:04 UTC
Bitcoin has demonstrated over the last 10 years that it is resilient to market crashes, government bans, and even organised FUD campaigns. However, lurking behind all this is a less-publicised threat which might challenge its decentralisation in some more fundamental ways than we have yet fully anticipated: global internet fragmentation.

And we are already witnessing the precursors:

  • The Great Firewall of China successfully isolating its internet against the rest of the world.
  • The Russian law of “Sovereign Internet” which allows the country to operate an isolated domestic internet.
  • Political crises such as the shutdowns in India, Iran and parts of Africa.
  • In some jurisdictions, satellite restrictions and spectrum control.

Should these trends pick up, we may enter a world where the global internet is fragmented into regional intranets with little cross-border connectivity.



Why This Matters for Bitcoin

The decentralisation of Bitcoin relies on the connectivity of nodes around the world. If extensive segments of the network are isolated:

  • Partitions may be long enough to create consensus splits.
  • Mining centralisation could gain momentum as only some regions will be able to reach out reliably to the majority chain.
  • Fee markets might be divisible, where various regions have various mempools and transaction backlogs.
  • Unless wallets become reliable when cross-border transactions must be broadcast or verified, user experience may suffer.



Images made with AI
Visualizing the Threat: If the global internet fractures into isolated “regional intranets,” Bitcoin’s node network could split into separate consensus islands. How would your node — and your transactions — survive in this scenario?




Potential Mitigations

There are solutions already on-board but are they adequate?

  • Eliminate reliance on the terrestrial internet by using satellite nodes (e.g., the Blockstream Satellite).
  • Mesh networks and Bitcoin relays with LoRa.
  • In extreme cases, sneakernet or physical transfer of signed transactions.
  • Multi-path relay protocols in order to avoid censorship.

However, these remain niche, and the uptake is low.



Questions for the Community

  • What is the realism of internet fragmentation at scale in 1020 years?
  • Can the current set of consensus rules on Bitcoin survive long network partitions without significant forks?



I want to know what node operators, miners, and devs have to say:

  • Have you tested Bitcoin in low-connectivity or partitioned environments?
  • How would it be most practical to maintain Bitcoin as it is worldwide when the internet ceases to be worldwide?



And, if we are serious about Bitcoin as a money that is censorship-resistant and borderless, then this is a discussion we must have before it becomes a crisis.