Recently, the situation in Iran has rapidly escalated beyond the point of mere "tension."
Widespread internet outages have become the norm, with international media almost unable to access on-the-ground footage, and even international satellite communication services have been forcibly interrupted. A phenomenon behind this is worth noting: when a regime faces uncertainty, the first thing to be cut off is the flow of information.
What does this phenomenon mean for the crypto market?
Historically, whenever political instability, fiat currency devaluation, or capital flow restrictions occur, demand for crypto assets surges. This is not only because of their cross-border nature but also because they can maintain liquidity under information control environments — something fiat currencies and traditional finance cannot provide.
Once national-level information censorship intensifies, people's reliance on Web3 tools such as decentralized communication, cross-chain transfers, and on-chain assets will sharply increase. Although this demand is localized, in the long term for the global crypto market, it reinforces a narrative: crypto assets = a hedge for financial sovereignty + information freedom.
This is why events like these are long-term positives for the entire crypto ecosystem — they demonstrate through real cases the essential need for decentralized finance.
View Original
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.
14 Likes
Reward
14
3
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
GasSavingMaster
· 5h ago
Starting to hoard coins when offline—this trick is so familiar.
View OriginalReply0
governance_ghost
· 5h ago
Raising coins when offline? This logic is a bit outrageous... but it does hit on something.
View OriginalReply0
ChainBrain
· 5h ago
Starting to hoard coins when offline, this logic makes perfect sense.
Recently, the situation in Iran has rapidly escalated beyond the point of mere "tension."
Widespread internet outages have become the norm, with international media almost unable to access on-the-ground footage, and even international satellite communication services have been forcibly interrupted. A phenomenon behind this is worth noting: when a regime faces uncertainty, the first thing to be cut off is the flow of information.
What does this phenomenon mean for the crypto market?
Historically, whenever political instability, fiat currency devaluation, or capital flow restrictions occur, demand for crypto assets surges. This is not only because of their cross-border nature but also because they can maintain liquidity under information control environments — something fiat currencies and traditional finance cannot provide.
Once national-level information censorship intensifies, people's reliance on Web3 tools such as decentralized communication, cross-chain transfers, and on-chain assets will sharply increase. Although this demand is localized, in the long term for the global crypto market, it reinforces a narrative: crypto assets = a hedge for financial sovereignty + information freedom.
This is why events like these are long-term positives for the entire crypto ecosystem — they demonstrate through real cases the essential need for decentralized finance.