$SIGN : I didn’t really think about how fragmented identity and payments are until I looked at them together. You verify yourself in one system, then repeat the same process somewhere else. The systems don’t connect, so the friction just keeps repeating.

That’s where SIGN started to make more sense to me.

Instead of treating identity as stored data, it treats it as something that can be proven when needed. A verification doesn’t stay locked inside one platform. It becomes reusable across different systems without exposing the underlying information again.

That changes the flow more than it seems.

Because identity stops being something you submit over and over, and becomes something you carry as proof.

When you connect that with payments, the design goes further. Value isn’t just transferred, it can follow rules. Who can access it, when it becomes available, how it’s used.

At that point, identity and money stop operating separately.

They start to function as part of the same system, where verification and execution are linked instead of isolated.

#SignDigitalSovereignInfra @SignOfficial