Middle East economic growth is accelerating—new trade corridors, fintech adoption, and ambitious public-sector digitization are all moving in parallel. But scale creates a familiar bottleneck: trust. When businesses, banks, and public institutions operate across borders, “trust me” doesn’t work as well as prove it. That’s why I’m paying attention to @SignOfficial and the vision behind Sign as digital sovereign infrastructure.

In practice, the next phase of growth will depend on reliable primitives: verifiable identity, authorized signatures, and compliant attestations that can be checked instantly, not negotiated repeatedly. If Sign can standardize how credentials and permissions are issued and verified—while keeping them auditable and interoperable—it becomes an enabling layer for real economic activity: cross-border onboarding, institution-grade settlement flows, compliant B2B partnerships, and digital public services that require strong authorization.

What makes this thesis compelling is that it’s not just “another chain narrative.” It’s infrastructure thinking: building the rails for who is allowed to do what, and how that authorization can be proven across organizations. If that rail becomes widely adopted, $SIGN can evolve into a utility asset aligned with network usage—supporting the cost of verifications, incentives for participation, and the long-term sustainability of the trust network.

I’m watching the ecosystem progress closely, because in a region moving fast, the winners are often the projects that make coordination cheaper and trust more programmable. #SignDigitakSovereignInfra $SIGN