@SignOfficial #SignDigitalSovereignInfra

What stands out about SIGN right now is the shift in how it presents itself. The latest documentation no longer frames the project as only an attestation tool; it now positions S.I.G.N. as infrastructure for three public-system layers: money, identity, and capital, with Sign Protocol serving as the evidence layer underneath. Recent updates also show TokenTable being tied more clearly to rules-based distributions like benefits, grants, vesting, and compliant asset flows. The newer whitepaper adds more concrete public-sector examples too, from digital identity in Bhutan to e-visa processing and cross-border verification. That makes SIGN feel less like a token story and more like a trust-and-records stack aimed at institutions that need audit trails, privacy controls, and operational oversight at the same time.This is grounded in SIGN’s refreshed docs, which were updated about a month ago, plus the December 2025 whitepaper revision 2.2.0. The docs now describe S.I.G.N. around money, identity, and capital; define Sign Protocol as the shared evidence layer; and describe TokenTable as the allocation and distribution engine. The whitepaper also references Bhutan digital identity, e-visa issuance, and cross-border verification use cases.