#signdigitalsovereigninfra $SIGN Last month, a freelance designer I know lost a high-paying client after their credentials were flagged as “unverified.” Not fakenjust unverifiable. That gap is exactly where $SIGN tokens step in. Instead of static PDFs or LinkedIn claims, credentials get anchored on-chain, signed, and tied to verifiable identities.
Think of sign as a tamper-proof seal once a certificate is issued and validated, anyone can instantly check its authenticity without relying on a central authority. Recent updates around on-chain attestations and cross-platform integrations are pushing this further, making verification faster and monetizable. Holders can even earn by participating in validation layers, aligning incentives across the network.
In a world where trust is expensive, sign turns authenticity into a reward mechanism, not just a requirement.
Would you trust a credential more if it was backed by tokens and cryptographic proof? And should verification itself become a revenue stream for users?