I never really questioned how trust works on the internet. I just used things. I signed up, verified accounts, accepted terms, and moved on without thinking twice. But when I actually stopped and looked closer, I realized how much of it depends on systems I can’t really verify on my own.
That’s where $SIGN Global started to make sense to me. At first, I thought it was just another crypto-related tool, but the more I explored it, the more it felt like something deeper. It’s not just about doing things online, it’s about leaving behind proof that those things actually happened.
What pulled me in was the idea of attestations. I don’t see them as just signatures anymore. I see them as records I can rely on later. Something that doesn’t disappear or depend on a platform deciding to keep it safe for me. It gives me a way to check things myself instead of just trusting that everything was handled correctly.
Recently, I’ve noticed how they’re pushing toward this broader direction with S.I.G.N. And to me, it doesn’t feel like a feature update. It feels like a shift in thinking. I see it as building a system where identity, transactions, and even how value moves can all be tracked in a way that I can verify anytime.
What really changed for me is how I think about trust now. I don’t just ask myself if I trust a platform anymore. I ask if I can prove what happened without depending on it. And once I started thinking like that, I couldn’t really go back.
