Most people still see Sign Protocol as just a place to store attestations. I used to think the same. But the more I watch it, the more I realize it’s closer to reusable trust.

You verify something once, and instead of moving raw data everywhere, you carry a proof that others can rely on. That changes how systems work, especially across chains where things usually break, mismatch, or repeat.

I’m watching how this idea evolves in real use. Because if multiple apps start depending on the same verified truths, things get simpler but also more fragile in a different way.

People know trust isn’t just about proving something once. It’s about who is allowed to issue that proof, and what happens when it’s no longer valid.

That’s the part I’m still thinking about.

@SignOfficial #SignDigitalSovereignInfra

$SIGN