Sign Protocol is focused on one of the few problems in Web3 that still has not been solved properly: verifiable trust.
Not the social kind.
The infrastructure kind.
Who qualified for something. What was approved. Which records are real. What can still be verified later without relying on fragmented dashboards or offchain coordination.
That is the part that makes Sign Protocol worth watching.
It is building around attestations and structured onchain records, which sounds technical at first, but the use case is easy to understand. As ecosystems scale, proving and reusing trusted data becomes a real bottleneck.
That is also why this stands out from the usual infrastructure pitch.
The idea is not to create another layer for the sake of it. The goal is to make claims, credentials, and distribution logic more usable across Web3.
That is how I look at SIGN right now.
Not as a loud narrative trade, but as a project built around a problem the market keeps running into.