@SignOfficial I remember the first time I had to prove something online… it felt weirdly manual. Screenshots, PDFs, waiting for approvals. In a world that’s supposedly “digital-first”, why does trust still feel so offline?

That’s where I started paying attention to Sign Protocol on Ethereum. Not in a hype way, just curiosity. From what I’ve seen, it’s trying to turn credentials into something you actually own, not something platforms hold hostage.

Think about it like this. Instead of a company saying “trust me, this user is verified,” the proof lives on-chain. Your achievements, roles, contributions… they’re not locked in some server anymore. They become portable. That’s the part that clicked for me.

But I’ll be honest, it’s not all smooth. On-chain identity still feels early. There’s friction, costs, and let’s not ignore privacy concerns. Not everything should be public forever. That balance between transparency and control… still being figured out.

Still, I can’t shake this feeling that this kind of infrastructure is quietly becoming essential. Not flashy, not trending every day, but foundational. The kind of thing you only notice once it’s everywhere.

And maybe that’s the point.

#SignDigitalSovereignInfra $SIGN