The next wave of economic growth in the Middle East will not be powered by oil alone — it will be powered by trusted digital infrastructure. That is why I think @SignOfficial is building something much bigger than a typical Web3 product. Sign is positioning itself as a foundational layer for digital sovereignty: helping institutions, businesses, and communities coordinate identity, agreements, verification, and onchain trust at scale.
For fast-growing economies in the Gulf and across the wider MENA region, the ability to create secure, transparent, and programmable digital systems is becoming essential. Governments are digitizing services, startups are scaling globally, and capital is moving faster than ever. But none of that works efficiently without reliable trust infrastructure.
This is where $SIGN becomes interesting. Instead of treating trust as a manual process, Sign turns it into infrastructure — verifiable, scalable, and native to the internet economy. In a region focused on innovation, compliance, and long-term strategic development, this kind of digital backbone could become incredibly valuable.
I see Sign not just as a project, but as part of the future architecture of sovereign digital economies.