Exactly. Real adoption = real utility.
That's why we let you buy eSIMs with crypto in 190+ countries. No bank needed. No KYC. Just pay and connect.
When you can use crypto like money, it becomes money.
Local businesses in Las Vegas are beginning to accept Bitcoin payments, following a national trend showing it gaining traction among merchants cutting costs and attracting customers.
The telecom industry is the last industry that charges you MORE for the same service the moment you cross a border.
Same towers. Same bandwidth. Same infrastructure.
But the second your passport gets stamped, your bill triples.
That's not a business model — it's a toll booth.
@Oma_GuGu 50k for a SIM card that came in a whole starter pack with instructions and everything lol
now you can download an eSIM in 30 seconds from your couch. the future really did arrive
@DailyDarkWeb 24,000 customers exposed because their telecom stored everything.
this is exactly why tying your identity to a SIM card is a liability, not a feature.
no-KYC connectivity options exist for a reason. your telecom shouldn't be a single point of failure for your privacy.
This is what real Bitcoin adoption looks like. Not ETF numbers. Not price charts.
Someone helping a burger truck owner accept his first sats in 30 seconds.
Every service that lets you spend crypto directly — without converting back to fiat — moves the needle.
Noticed the Bitcoin logo on a @CashApp checkout screen at the best burger truck in NJ. The owner didn’t know he could accept Bitcoin. So together we figured it out in 30 second and I became his first Bitcoin customer. He said “So I just earned my first bitcoins?” And then immediately turned to the line customers waiting and announced: “We take Bitcoin now!” Honestly one of the most rewarding moments using bitcoin ever. Bravo Cash App, this is exactly how adoption happens.
Your carrier knows every country you visit, every tower you connect to, every border you cross.
International roaming doesn't just cost you money. It costs you privacy.
An eSIM from an independent provider changes that. No ID. No contracts. Just connectivity.
@anjusabu@IndianGems_ this is exactly why eSIMs are a game changer for travelers. no paperwork, no passport scans, no hunting for a shop that's open. just land and connect.
India's SIM registration process for tourists is brutal
@wacomup@justdavenow89 the telecom industry's whole business model is "you crossed a border? that'll be $15/day please"
eSIMs fixed this and most people still don't know
This is why we built CryptoeSIM.
Stop farming airdrops for pennies. Start using your crypto to buy actual things — like global data in 190+ countries, delivered in seconds, no KYC required.
Crypto was supposed to be money. Let's use it like money.
The funny thing about crypto is that people will spend 8 months farming an airdrop worth $500 reward.
Then refuse to take profit on a coin that’s already up $5,000 in few hours.
Somehow we have more patience for rewards we don't have than money we already made.
Your carrier charges you $12/day for "international roaming" that throttles after 500MB.
A local eSIM costs $3 for the whole trip.
The markup isn't a feature. It's a bet that you won't Google your options before you land.
@arn9971@tescomobile Pro tip: grab a Turkey eSIM before you fly — activate it the second you land, no hunting for a SIM shop at the airport, and way cheaper than carrier bolt-ons. Your wallet will thank you later
This is the real unlock.
Merchants don't struggle with crypto because the tech is hard — they struggle because the compliance layer makes it slow.
We took a different approach with CryptoeSIM:
→ Accept BTC, ETH, USDT
→ No merchant onboarding friction
→ No KYC required
→ Service works in 190+ countries
Crypto payments don't need to be complicated.
https://t.co/E7g1bkOfvy
3 myths about eSIMs that need to die:
1. "Only new phones support them" — Most devices from 2020+ have eSIM. That’s 6 years of phones.
2. "They’re complicated" — You scan a QR code. Done. Easier than popping open a SIM tray with a paperclip.
3. "They cost more" — Many travel eSIM plans run $5–15/week. Your carrier charges $10/day just for roaming.
The tech is ready. Adoption is the bottleneck.
When you land in a new country, what's your first move?
A) Airport SIM kiosk — 30 min wait, passport required
B) Carrier roaming — surprise bill when you get home
C) eSIM activated before takeoff
D) Hotel WiFi only and pray
Reply with your letter. No judgment.
(okay maybe a little if you pick B)
solid list but upgrade on point 2: skip the airport kiosk entirely
you can buy an eSIM from your couch before you even pack. activate it mid-flight, land with data already working
no passport scan, no haggling, no "sorry sir we only accept local currency"
future of travel is digital-first