@SignOfficial I used to think airdrops were simple — connect wallet, check eligibility, claim tokens. But one day I paused before clicking, and the question wasn’t about scams… it was about understanding.

How does the system know I deserve this?

The more I thought about it, the clearer it became: it doesn’t. It only sees patterns — transactions, volume, activity. Not intent. Not contribution. Just signals.

And signals can be faked.

That’s where the idea of verified actions — attestations — started to make sense. Not who I am, but what I’ve actually done, confirmed by someone else. It sounds small, but it changes the game.

If distribution starts relying on what’s verified instead of what’s measurable, behavior will shift. People won’t just act — they’ll act in ways that can be seen, proven, and counted.

But that raises a different question.

Who decides what counts?

Because the moment verification matters, power quietly moves to those who define it.

I’m not sure where this leads yet.

I just know the next time I click “Connect Wallet,” I won’t be thinking about rewards.

I’ll be thinking about what the system thinks I am — and how it came to that conclusion.

$SIGN @SignOfficial #SignDigitalSovereignInfra

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