From Paper Systems to Protocol-Based Governance
Most governments still rely on paper and legacy systems for verification, which slows processes and opens gaps for errors. Sign changes that by moving trust onto a protocol layer, creating verifiable, on-chain governance records that anyone can audit.
Built on robust blockchain architecture, Sign integrates schema-driven attestations, ensuring new data types can be added without breaking existing workflows. Governments and enterprises are already piloting it to digitize workflows while maintaining legal and procedural integrity.
What excites me is how Sign bridges the old and new: legacy systems stay compatible, yet operations gain transparency and verifiability. This is the kind of infrastructure I’ll be watching closely as digital governance matures.
