The real question is not whether you own your identity. But whether that identity can move and be recognized across different systems without encountering obstacles. That's when the idea of sovereignty becomes more meaningful. Digital sovereignty is not just about holding credentials in your wallet. It is about having an identity that can be verified, trusted, and reused wherever you go. That is the direction I see in what #SignDigitalSovereignInfra is building with $SIGN @SignOfficial. Rather than viewing identity as a static thing locked in a single platform. They are turning it into something mobile, interoperable, and truly usable across many ecosystems. The easiest way I think about it is like a passport. A passport has no value just because you own it. It has value because other systems recognize it and accept it as proof. The same logic is now being applied to digital identity. With $SIGN, your identity is not tied to a specific application or chain.