I’m not even that deep into “on-chain identity,” but one thing that always bothered me is how quickly everything turns into overexposure.
You try to prove one small thing — like you’re an early user or you completed something — and suddenly it feels like you’re handing over your whole wallet history just to pass a simple check. Which is a weird trade-off… because the more active you are, the more you end up revealing.
Sign Protocol approaches that from a different angle.
Instead of exposing everything, it lets you share just the proof that matters — an attestation that says, “this is verified,” without dragging along all the extra context behind it. So you’re not constantly choosing between privacy and participation.
It’s not perfect, but it moves things toward something crypto’s been missing for a while — selective transparency, where you can prove enough without showing everything.
@SignOfficial #SignDigitalSovereignInfra $SIGN
