I've been watching Sign's hybrid architecture settle into real ecosystems over the past year, and one thing keeps standing out.
The way they split public attestations from private sovereign layers isn't just technical housekeeping it's a deliberate choice that lets governments keep sensitive credential data off the main chain while still triggering compliant token flows through TokenTable...
You see it in how eligibility proofs quietly translate into automated distributions without the usual middlemen or audit headaches.
What surprises me is how this design has shaped ecosystem behavior: teams and agencies are using the protocol more for steady, rule bound capital programs than for one off airdrops, even as the token navigates its unlock schedule.
It feels less like infrastructure chasing hype and more like infrastructure learning to sit inside existing systems...
That's the part I find most interesting it's the slow, structural kind of progress that rarely makes headlines but tends to outlast the noise.
@SignOfficial #SignDigitalSovereignInfra $SIGN

