I keep thinking sovereign digital infrastructure probably won’t be won by the loudest chain, but by the system that makes verification portable across institutions. That’s why $SIGN catches my attention. S.I.G.N. frames national money, identity, and capital systems around an evidence layer, and Sign Protocol sits underneath that with attestations meant to make claims auditable across different environments.
What makes this interesting is that $SIGN is positioned less like a meme of “state adoption” and more like utility around protocol operations, governance, and verification flows. The hard part is whether that architecture can scale without turning into another semi-closed stack with weak developer pull. I’ll be watching repeat usage, real institutional deployments, and whether attestations keep growing when incentives are no longer the main reason to show up.
@SignOfficial #SignDigitalSovereignInfra $SIGN
