Most crypto projects talk about speed, fees, or scalability. But @SignOfficial is trying to position itself in a completely different category — digital sovereignty infrastructure.
In regions like the Middle East, the real shift is not just about adopting blockchain, but about controlling identity, agreements, and data at a sovereign level. This is where the idea behind $SIGN becomes interesting.
However, the challenge is execution. Building trust frameworks that governments and institutions can rely on is far more difficult than launching a typical blockchain product. Without clear real-world adoption, even strong concepts risk staying theoretical.
Still, if @SignOfficial manages to turn verifiable credentials and cross-border trust into something practical, $SIGN could evolve beyond a standard token narrative.
Right now, it’s a strong idea — but still in the phase where proof matters more than promises.