@SignOfficial || I have built developer tools for trust layers in digital systems, and Sign Protocol stands out for its focus on sovereign attestations.

It gives developers a clear way to create and manage verifiable statements that can be used in identity, compliance, or economic applications.

The developer platform and SDK make it straightforward. You define schemas for structured data, then issue attestations that are signed and stored either on chain or off chain.

The SDK handles creation, retrieval, and verification across multiple networks without forcing complex setups.

This supports sovereign models where governments or institutions control issuance while individuals hold and present proofs.

The hard part I always watch is governance and minimal disclosure.

Sign lets issuers set clear rules on what gets attested and who can verify it.

Developers can build applications where only necessary facts are shared, reducing data sprawl and supporting auditability when required.

Recovery and revocation stay manageable under real conditions.

After working on similar infrastructure, I see how this approach helps build resilient systems.

It keeps trust verifiable yet controllable, fitting national priorities without unnecessary centralization.

$SIGN #SignDigitalSovereignInfra