💵Tokenized Payments Are Coming — But Where Does Trust Come From? 🚀
Over the past few days, I’ve noticed that discussions around cross-border payments have been heating up again.
The G20 is still pushing forward its roadmap to improve cross-border payments, and tokenized payments are clearly emerging as a major trend going into 2026.
As money and assets become tokenized, a big question comes up:
How do we make transactions fast, transparent, and compliant… without sacrificing user privacy?
From what I understand, Sign enables the creation of verifiable credentials based on open standards, supporting selective disclosure and zero-knowledge proofs.
This means parties can prove what’s necessary for compliance (like AML/KYC) without exposing all their data.
In the context of G20’s push for tokenized cross-border payments, I think Sign could act as a kind of “shared trust layer.”
As tokens move across borders, attestations from Sign can help verify origin and ownership quickly, in a way that’s auditable while still respecting each country’s data sovereignty.
It’s not the only solution out there, but to me, it feels aligned with what future digital infrastructure actually needs — transparent, yet flexible.
What do you think about tokenized payments?
Could an “evidence layer” be the missing piece to make this trend truly work?
@SignOfficial
#SignDigitalSovereignInfra $SIGN
