Space is for Everyone: Championing Inclusivity in Tech
By Seda Hewitt, Interstellar Communication Holdings Inc., United States
There’s a tendency—still, even now—for space to feel like it belongs to someone else. To governments. To billionaires. To people with advanced degrees or corporate ties. And while those voices are absolutely part of the story, they’re not the only ones who belong at the table—or in orbit.
At Interstellar Communication Holdings Inc., based in the United States, we’re working toward something different. Through our PocketQube missions like HADES‑ICM and the icMercury platform, we’ve seen a shift. Space is no longer reserved for the privileged few. It’s becoming more open, more participatory, and—most importantly—more human.
But the truth is, this openness doesn’t happen by accident. It takes intention. It takes infrastructure. It takes storytelling, outreach, and platforms that don’t just allow for inclusion, but actively invite it.
Why Inclusivity in Space Tech Matters
It’s not just a feel-good idea. Diversity in technology—especially in emerging fields like nanosatellites—leads to more robust solutions. Different minds see different problems. They approach them in ways others wouldn’t even consider.
When satellite access is limited to large institutions or specific geographies, we miss out on a huge range of innovation. That’s not hypothetical—it’s quantifiable. There are ideas from rural educators in Nigeria, from Indigenous students in Canada, from young women in STEM clubs in Southeast Asia, that can change how we think about satellite usage.
The point is not charity. It’s equity. And frankly, it’s smart.
How We’re Trying to Make Room
At Interstellar Communication Holdings Inc., we’ve made a few quiet but deliberate choices:
Transparent telemetry: We publish our satellite data formats and welcome decoding communities worldwide. You don’t need a contract or a password—just curiosity.
Educational kits: Through our icMercury program, we help schools and citizen groups get involved in satellite tracking and experimentation.
Low-barrier launch partnerships: We work with rideshare providers to keep payload costs down, enabling more small teams and individuals to enter orbit.
There’s a story I often think about—a group of high school girls from the Midwest who used open-source tools to build their own ground station. They tracked HADES‑ICM from their school roof and presented their findings to the local council. Nothing flashy. No spotlight. But that’s the work that changes things.
Not every innovation happens in a lab. Sometimes it’s in a classroom. Sometimes it’s on a kitchen table.
Representation Isn’t Just a Visual
Of course, inclusivity isn’t only about who gets to participate technically. It’s about who sees themselves reflected in the narrative.
This is where storytelling plays a role. We’re intentional about who speaks for our company. I write these pieces not as a faceless corporate rep, but as Seda Hewitt—a woman in aerospace, speaking from lived experience. And I know how rare that still is.
When young people see someone like them in space—when they hear their language, see their culture acknowledged, find tools that meet them where they are—it sticks. It plants a seed. And sometimes that seed grows into a career, a mission, a whole new industry standard.
Inclusion at the Global Level
This November, Interstellar Communication Holdings Inc. will be in London, attending the 2025 Go Global Awards, hosted by the International Trade Council. We’re honored to be nominated.
But what excites me even more is what the event represents: a global exchange of ideas, experiences, and potential partnerships. This isn’t just an awards night. It’s a conclave of minds from across borders, across industries. An environment where real collaboration can take root.
And yes, it’s the perfect setting to keep talking about inclusive access—not just in space tech, but in all tech. Because the future we’re building depends on who gets to help build it.
Making Space Feel Personal
We’re not under any illusion that satellites are suddenly “easy.” They’re complex. They require patience, training, tools. But they’re no longer as unreachable as they once were.
Part of our mission is showing that you don’t have to be a rocket scientist to participate. You can be a teacher looking to inspire your students. A maker tinkering with antennas. A retiree scanning signals from your backyard. A student asking “What if?”
Inclusivity means honoring all those roles. Because each one adds value. Each one keeps the movement growing.
A Final Thought
Inclusivity isn’t a box you check. It’s a culture. A philosophy. A commitment to asking “Who else can be here?” and then actually making room.
Space, despite its vastness, used to feel closed off. But today, that’s changing. At Interstellar Communication Holdings Inc., we’re just one part of that shift. We believe the skies are open—not just physically, but ideologically.
So the next time you hear a satellite pass overhead, remember: that signal? It’s not just science. It’s an invitation.
You’re welcome here.












