I used to think identity verification was a one time process.
Once done, it should just work everywhere.
But in reality, every system acts in isolation, forcing users to repeat the same checks again and again.
That’s not a failure of identity or compliance itself. It’s a failure of portability.
Sign Protocol approaches this differently. Instead of treating verification as a one off event, it turns it into structured, signed attestations data that can be reused, verified, and understood across systems.
These aren’t just signals; they are machine readable claims representing real outcomes like KYC, eligibility or compliance.
That shift matters.
Because when verification becomes reusable, it stops being friction and starts becoming infrastructure.
The scale already reflects this direction. Over 6 million attestations processed, $4B+ in distributions and 40M+ wallets reached.
But the real signal isn’t just the numbers it’s the behavior behind them.
This is about moving from isolated checks to portable trust.
From repeating processes to reusing proof.
And from fragmented systems to a shared verification layer that actually carries forward.
That’s where things start to feel practical.
