I used to think CBDCs would turn into surveillance tools by default. That’s the part most people get wrong.


What I see with $SIGN is a different path. It separates control from visibility.


Instead of forcing all data into one system, SIGN turns every critical action into an attestation. That means transactions, limits, and eligibility rules can be verified without exposing everything behind them.


Policy becomes programmable.

If a wallet holds a valid identity credential, a smart contract can enforce rules like limits, subsidies, or access without manual checks.


What matters is how this scales.

The central bank doesn’t need to watch every transaction directly. It just needs verifiable proof that rules were followed.


That changes the model completely.


Not “trust the system.”

But “verify the system worked.”


That’s the shift from digital money to sovereign, programmable money.

#SignDigitalSovereignInfra
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