According to reports, the test aimed to show that cryptographic transactions can be sent via satellite radio and still be validated at the other end.
That path covered roughly 7,000 kilometers. Based on reports, the message was processed on the Creditcoin test network rather than a major public mainnet. The demonstration was presented at TOKEN2049.
Company posts and media reports say the event was a single proof-of-concept meant to check whether signature data and transaction integrity survive the trip through spaceborne links.
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According to Spacecoin’s posts, the nanosatellite used in the test was supplied in partnership with EnduroSat. The firm also mentioned plans to add three more satellites as part of a CTC-1 cluster, scheduled for launch in Q4 2025.
Those additions are intended to increase coverage and allow inter-satellite handoffs. Reports caution that a small cluster of satellites is not the same as continuous global coverage, but it would expand the number of possible uplink and downlink windows for users in remote places.
Based on reports and commentary from industry observers, the demo leaves several important questions open. Radio links can be slow and have limited bandwidth. Latency grows when signals travel to orbit and back.
The method is vulnerable to interference, jamming, or misrouting if proper safeguards are not in place. While the transaction itself carried cryptographic signatures that were verifiable, experts say operational security for ground stations, frequency licensing across countries, and robust anti-spoofing measures will be essential before any real service can be offered to consumers.
Reports note potential benefits. Satellite-based routing could provide a backup route for remote communities, disaster zones, or places with unreliable or censored internet.
That said, launching and operating satellites has big costs. Ground terminals are needed. Adoption will depend on price, ease of setup, and whether users can get reliable, timely service rather than intermittent windows.
Competing with large networks will require a clear niche — for example, specialized uplinks for blockchain messaging, or partnerships with regional operators. The economics will matter as much as the technical proof.
Featured image from Gemini, chart from TradingView