#signdigitalsovereigninfra $SIGN
I keep thinking about how most systems decide who gets access. It’s rarely about whether you can participate. It’s about whether you’re recognized as someone who should.
And that recognition doesn’t travel well.
You can meet every requirement in one platform, one region, one network and still have to go through the same process again somewhere else. Not because anything changed, but because each system works in isolation. It doesn’t trust what came before.
That’s where something like $SIGN starts to feel relevant to me.
Not as another identity solution, but as a way to carry eligibility forward. The idea that once you’ve been verified under certain conditions, that status shouldn’t disappear the moment you move across systems. It should stay with you, at least in a usable form.
What makes this interesting is how simple the problem is, and how persistent it’s been. We don’t lack verification. We lack continuity.
And when that continuity is missing, everything slows down. Onboarding takes longer. Access becomes uncertain. Small frictions repeat until they start shaping the experience itself.
If SIGN can reduce even part of that repetition, it changes more than just efficiency. It changes how participation feels.
I’m not sure yet how far it can go. But the direction makes sense.