Middle East economies are moving fast—diversifying beyond oil, accelerating digital government services, and competing to attract global capital and talent. But “growth” isn’t only about funding; it’s also about trust rails: identity, credentials, compliance-ready attestations, and verifiable data exchange across borders and institutions. That’s why I’m paying attention to @SignOfficial and the long-term thesis around $SIGN .

If you want a region to scale trade, tourism, fintech, and smart-city services, you need infrastructure that can prove who is participating, what they’re allowed to do, and which data is authentic—without forcing every country or enterprise to surrender control of sensitive information. In other words: digital sovereignty + interoperability. Sign’s positioning as digital sovereign infrastructure speaks directly to this need. When a business can onboard faster, a credential can be verified instantly, and compliance checks can be automated with cryptographic proofs/attestations, you reduce friction across the whole economy.

The opportunity is bigger than “one app” or “one chain.” It’s about enabling governments, enterprises, and builders to coordinate securely—across jurisdictions—while keeping governance and policy local. If Sign succeeds at becoming a trusted coordination layer, $SIGN isn’t just a token story; it’s a network utility story tied to real economic throughput.

Curious to see how @SignOfficial continues to evolve this stack and what partners build on top of it. #SignDigitalSovereignInfra $SIGN