There’s something quiet missing in Web3. Identity, credentials, payments - they all exist, but they don’t really connect. A wallet shows who you are, but without texture. A credential proves 1-action, but often stays isolated. A payment records 1-transfer, but not the reason behind it.

So this idea of a “digital trust layer” keeps coming up. Not as something visible, but as a foundation underneath. A way to let these pieces relate to each other, instead of sitting apart.

Sign seems to be working in that space, though I’m not fully sure what that means yet. The thought is that identity could carry earned signals over time, not just static data. But then I wonder who decides what counts as “earned,” and how stable that really is.

The token question doesn’t feel settled either. If there is 1-token in the system, does it support trust, or does it complicate it? Trust tends to build slowly, while tokens tend to move fast.

Maybe this layer is necessary. Or maybe it’s still being shaped, and we’re just trying to name it too early. @SignOfficial $SIGN

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