I’ve been looking into how @SignOfficial approaches standards and interoperability, it actually feels grounded.
Using frameworks like W3C Verifiable Credentials and DIDs isn’t just technical it’s what allows trust to move across borders. In theory, a credential issued in one country can be verified anywhere, without losing sovereignty. That’s powerful.
But I keep thinking interoperability always sounds smooth on paper. In reality, systems have friction, policies differ and control is rarely fully shared. If implemented right, this could unify fragmented identity systems into something verifiable and global. If not, it risks becoming another layered system that looks open but still operates in silos.
