I have a question that I've been holding in for several days: why did the government choose Sign instead of building their own system?
This question has been on my mind for several days, until I saw that report from Chainwire and finally understood.
What Sign sells to the government is not "replace your existing system with ours," but "add a backup layer next to you that won't crash."
These two statements differ greatly in terms of sales difficulty. The former requires the government to acknowledge failure, which faces significant political resistance. The latter is standard logic for IT risk control, and any tech team can approve the budget.
Then there’s the question of why Sign can sell this backup layer—Tiger Research's report provides the answer: TokenTable has executed $3 billion in token distribution and 55 million wallets in Web3. This large-scale distribution combined with identity verification and anti-duplication capabilities addresses the same issues the government faces with issuing CBDCs and social welfare. This is a real delivery record, not just a concept.
Thus, Kyrgyzstan, Sierra Leone, the UAE, and Thailand chose @SignOfficial —because Sign comes with a track record, not just a white paper.
This Wednesday, the Federal Reserve said "nobody knows," oil prices are still high, and there are no signs of easing geopolitical tensions. Every time there’s "uncertain," it helps Sign complete another round of free customer education.
$SIGN today is approximately $0.046, with a market cap of $74M, having dropped -2.50% this week. I don't think this position is a perfect entry point, but I believe the answer to the question of "why choose Sign" will become clearer by 2026.
What do you think?
#sign地缘政治基建 $SIGN
{future}(SIGNUSDT)