Don't just focus on the Middle Eastern tycoons throwing money around, see who is helping them build the 'overpasses'
After staying up late to finish reading the digital white papers from the UAE and Saudi Arabia, to be honest, my first reaction was not 'they are really rich,' but rather 'this is really complicated.' Now Gulf countries are frantically sealing their own digital sovereignty, and a certificate from Dubai could just be a worthless piece of paper in Riyadh. The more solidly these 'digital islands' are built, the higher the trust costs for doing business across borders.
This is also the reason I have been stubbornly focused on @SignOfficial . The work it does is quite niche, but in geopolitically sensitive areas, it is simply a necessity: using on-chain ZK proofs to create a 'translation layer' for sovereign credit. You don't have to show the other party all your bank statements and privacy; you only need to throw out a mathematically tamper-proof certificate through Sign to prove 'I am indeed compliant and have money.'
Why do I say it is the 'invisible key' to economic growth in the Middle East?
• Turning 'islands' into 'passages': It is currently one of the few protocols that allows different sovereign systems to achieve logical interoperability without handing over core data.
• Real revenue: Last year's revenue was 15 million dollars, processing over 4 billion dollars in scale. This is considered a breath of fresh air in the Web3 circle, which often only paints a rosy picture.
• Geopolitical infrastructure attributes: It has already established cooperation with governments like the UAE and Sierra Leone; this threshold cannot be crossed simply by writing a few lines of code, but relies on local compliance and resource negotiation.
Of course, to be rational, this project is also quite entangled. There is a large unlocking event coming on March 28, and the stakes are highly concentrated, leading to significant short-term volatility risk. My advice is: this thing is a necessity for digital infrastructure in the Middle East, and while the growth potential is indeed top-notch, dealing with the government involves long cycles and many variables.
Conclusion: Prioritize survival first, watch the turnover situation after the unlock, and don't rush into it.
@SignOfficial
$SIGN
#Sign地缘政治基建
After staying up late to finish reading the digital white papers from the UAE and Saudi Arabia, to be honest, my first reaction was not 'they are really rich,' but rather 'this is really complicated.' Now Gulf countries are frantically sealing their own digital sovereignty, and a certificate from Dubai could just be a worthless piece of paper in Riyadh. The more solidly these 'digital islands' are built, the higher the trust costs for doing business across borders.
This is also the reason I have been stubbornly focused on @SignOfficial . The work it does is quite niche, but in geopolitically sensitive areas, it is simply a necessity: using on-chain ZK proofs to create a 'translation layer' for sovereign credit. You don't have to show the other party all your bank statements and privacy; you only need to throw out a mathematically tamper-proof certificate through Sign to prove 'I am indeed compliant and have money.'
Why do I say it is the 'invisible key' to economic growth in the Middle East?
• Turning 'islands' into 'passages': It is currently one of the few protocols that allows different sovereign systems to achieve logical interoperability without handing over core data.
• Real revenue: Last year's revenue was 15 million dollars, processing over 4 billion dollars in scale. This is considered a breath of fresh air in the Web3 circle, which often only paints a rosy picture.
• Geopolitical infrastructure attributes: It has already established cooperation with governments like the UAE and Sierra Leone; this threshold cannot be crossed simply by writing a few lines of code, but relies on local compliance and resource negotiation.
Of course, to be rational, this project is also quite entangled. There is a large unlocking event coming on March 28, and the stakes are highly concentrated, leading to significant short-term volatility risk. My advice is: this thing is a necessity for digital infrastructure in the Middle East, and while the growth potential is indeed top-notch, dealing with the government involves long cycles and many variables.
Conclusion: Prioritize survival first, watch the turnover situation after the unlock, and don't rush into it.
@SignOfficial
$SIGN
#Sign地缘政治基建