An inside look at what Sign is building
There is a moment in the study of any complex project when abstract concepts suddenly add up to a concrete picture and it becomes clear why this is all. For me and @SignOfficial , this moment came when I started thinking not about technology, but about the people who need it right now. 🤔

Imagine an entrepreneur from Egypt starting a business in the UAE. He needs to verify his education for a professional license, confirm his financial history for a bank account, and certify corporate documents for the regulator. Each of these processes now requires contacting different authorities, waiting times, expenses for notaries and translators, and risks of losing documents.
Sign creates an infrastructure in which all these verifications become attestations in the blockchain issued once by an authorized source and available for verification by any requesting authority instantly. A person no longer needs to reassemble a package of documents every time. The whole system becomes more efficient for all participants at the same time. 📋
The scale of this transformation is particularly significant in the Middle East, where digital infrastructure is being built from scratch as part of ambitious government programs. The countries of the region are not inheriting outdated systems that are difficult to replace, they are choosing standards right now, and Sign has a real chance to become one of these standards. 🌍
I keep the $SIGN token precisely because I understand that every government agency, bank, or university that integrates Sign into its processes makes the protocol a little more indispensable. This accumulates slowly but steadily, and it is precisely this stability that distinguishes infrastructural bets from speculative ones. I continue to follow the development of the project and consider it one of the most reasonable choices in the current landscape of Web3 infrastructure. 💎
📌 @SignOfficial #SignDigitalSovereignInfra