Stop hyping Middle Eastern funds, I've personally tested whether Sign's sovereign-level infrastructure can really hold up
Recently, the entire internet has been buzzing about geopolitical risk-averse funds, and everyone is getting excited. I'm inclined to first look for evidence. I spent a whole day verifying the much-talked-about sovereign infrastructure project Sign. Everyone says that Middle Eastern capital needs a decentralized trust layer, so I directly examined the underlying architecture of Sign to see if it can really handle this narrative.
I ran Sign's contracts on the testnet and found that generating credentials in this system is extremely smooth. Most competitors on the market simply issue a domain name or scan a retina, their approach is too simplistic. When I ran Sign's TokenTable and EthSign, I felt that it is completely doing cross-validation of assets and identity at the underlying level. To put it simply, it has turned compliance requirements into a foundational protocol. While I was testing, I complained that the interaction interface is too cold for retail investors, but infrastructure aimed at national-level institutions indeed doesn't need to be flashy.
I've always doubted whether sovereign funds would dare to use Web3 protocols in such a geopolitical environment. I specifically went to verify Sign's privacy model. It uses a hybrid solution of off-chain de-identification and on-chain zero-knowledge proofs. The huge funds in the Middle East that require both security and privacy are just right for this architecture. I'm not sure how quickly it can secure large orders, but I will keep a close eye on the node data on the Sign chain.
I like to thoroughly understand the logic before taking action. The sovereign asset track that Sign is entering has a very high ceiling, and the future value of the tokens depends entirely on these real usage volumes. Taking advantage of the Binance Creative Writing event from March 19 to April 2, I will publish my verification records from these two days. I'm not teaching people what to do, you can look at the on-chain data yourself.