@SignOfficial When I came across the Sign Protocol, my first reaction was: here comes another big talker? These days, anyone dares to say they want to 'change the world', just like someone in class saying 'I didn't study this time' and ended up scoring full marks, just talking nonsense. That night, I had nothing to do and opened its white paper, thinking I would just flip through a couple of pages and go to sleep—then, wow, it was dawn. I went through its investors and landing projects with dark circles under my eyes, and the more I dug, the more excited I became, it felt like I had been rummaging through a flea market for half a day, only to find that what I had in my hand was a real Ultraman transformation device.

What it does is actually very simple: it gives your "proof" back to you. In the past, if you wanted to prove you are you, you had to go to the police station to get a certificate proving you are your mother's biological child, and you had to go to the bank to get account statements proving you owe no money. Now the logic of Sign is that the school directly issues you an electronic signature, stored on your phone, which cannot be altered or stolen by anyone. When you look for a job, you just click on your phone, and the other party knows it's real, without going through any third party. This is called "your own things are decided by you." Moreover, it’s not just a boast—Kyrgyzstan and Sierra Leone are already using its digital identity system. Even more impressive are those wealthy countries in the Middle East; the UAE and Saudi Arabia want to engage in Web3 while fearing sanctions and trouble, and Sign's TokenTable has already issued over 2 billion dollars worth of items, essentially building a compliant highway for money in these "sensitive areas".#Sign

But there is a big pitfall here, and you need to heed the advice. Because it deals with identity, compliance, and international money distribution, it is destined to be the slowest, most laborious, and longest-cycle work in the crypto space. Connecting with governments and large companies, just the meetings and signatures can take one to two years. However, most of the people rushing into the secondary market to buy it are just "quick guns" trying to catch a wave of enthusiasm before the snapshot on April 2nd. You are optimistic about its future three years from now, but your money is only enough to last three days. There are a total of 10 billion coins, and currently, only 1.64 billion are circulating in the market, with more than 80% to be gradually released. No matter how impressive the infrastructure is, if it can't handle those selling coins, the price will still be crushed like a dog.$SIGN

So, if you really understand that those wealthy individuals in the Middle East want to engage in Web3 but are afraid of causing trouble and need a "compliant and safe" channel, then what you should do now is not to follow the trend and rush in, but to keep your hands in your pockets and watch from the sidelines. Wait for this wave of enthusiasm to pass, wait for those looking to make quick money to run away, and wait for the real institutions—like the money of those wealthy individuals in the Middle East—to quietly enter the market and take over, then that will be the real opportunity.#SignDigitalSovereignInfra