#signdigitalsovereigninfra $SIGN SIGN gives me the opposite reaction. It’s actually harder to summarize in one clean sentence, but the more I look at it, the more it feels like one of those rare projects that is trying to solve something foundational instead of dressing up another familiar token story.
At surface level, people usually put SIGN into boxes like credential verification, token distribution, attestations, identity rails, or onchain signatures. None of those descriptions are wrong. They’re just incomplete. What SIGN seems to be building is much closer to a trust infrastructure layer for the digital economy — the kind of thing that becomes more valuable as more systems, institutions, and users need proof that something is real, valid, approved, or authorized without repeating the whole verification process every single time.
That idea matters more than it sounds.
The internet became very good at moving data. Blockchains became very good at making transactions visible. But there is still a huge gap between information existing and information being trusted. That gap is everywhere. Who is eligible for something? Who signed what? Which wallet qualifies? Which claim is valid? Which distribution is legitimate? Which credential can be verified across systems without endless manual checks?
That is the territory SIGN is trying to own.