#signdigitalsovereigninfra $SIGN @SignOfficial

When I started to analyze the application of SIGN in the context of Sierra Leone, it became clear that it's not just about digital signatures, but about a trust infrastructure where it has historically been lacking.

In countries with limited access to the banking system and a weak bureaucratic base, the key issue is not the lack of money, but the lack of verifiable data.

SIGN changes the very approach. Any action, from obtaining a microloan to participating in a cooperative, can be recorded as a verifiable assertion. Not just a record, but a confirmed fact that can be reused.

I envisioned a real scenario where a farmer receives funding from a local DAO. Instead of paper contracts, a digital agreement signed through a wallet. After that, it does not need to be re-verified in every new service; one proof is sufficient. This saves time, reduces risks, and eliminates intermediaries.

The most interesting thing is that such data, thanks to SIGN, begins to live; they influence access to new opportunities, loans, subsidies, and markets. Reputation ceases to be local and becomes portable.