Yeah, beyond the broader existential questions that is a very fundamentally important basis (keeping Bitcoin usable).
Cyberspace and digital communities seem very "real" now, and it's foreseeable that they become even more integral to our daily lives, but at the end of the day everything on the internet runs on technology and infrastructure, two things that are heavily dependent on capital, and therefore state power.
Bitcoin promotes the ethos of true property rights, sovereignty, and technological innovation, so it seems likely that some sort of alternative to current networking infrastructure could be devised, but that's getting way out into the realm of speculation and/or paranoia.