I have been thinking about how trust works online.Not the idea of trust, but how it actually moves. Or maybe more accurately, how it doesn’t.Most of the time, trust feels stuck inside individual platforms. You build some form of credibility in one place, but it doesn’t really carry anywhere else. You start over again somewhere new, repeating the same steps.It works, but it feels inefficient.You can usually tell when something is missing in the background. Everything functions, but nothing connects properly.That’s what made SIGN stand out to me.The idea seems to focus on letting trust move. Credentials don’t stay locked inside one platform. They can be verified once and then reused across different environments without restarting the process every time.At first, I thought of it as a convenience.But after sitting with it for a while, it starts to feel more structural than that.Because once trust can move, systems begin to feel connected. Interactions become smoother. You’re not constantly rebuilding the same proof from scratch.That’s where things get interesting.It’s not just about efficiency. It changes how ecosystems grow.While thinking about this, I kept coming back to the Middle East. There’s a clear push toward building independent digital economies there, but trust layers still feel fragmented between platforms and institutions.If SIGN becomes widely adopted, it could quietly act as digital sovereign infrastructure supporting that growth. A shared layer where trust isn’t isolated, but allowed to move across systems.I’m still watching how this develops.But it already feels like a step toward something more connected, where trust doesn’t stay stuck in one place anymore.#SignDigitalSovereignInfra $SIGN @SignOfficial