Most people in the Web3 world don't really think about audits... until something goes wrong.
We lock funds inside smart contracts, interact daily with protocols, and simply assume everything is fine because someone, somewhere, audited it. But if you look deeper, you'll find that many of these audits are static: a report at a certain moment, and that's it. There's no easy way to track what has changed or to verify later.
That's why the protocol $SIGN catches my attention.
It doesn't treat audits as a one-time event, but as something that can live, evolve, and be verified repeatedly. Instead of just reading a report, audits can turn into “attestations,” which are real data recorded, shared, and verified across different platforms.
And instead of blind trust in a statement like “audited,” you can actually see the evidence, track updates, and understand what has been verified over time.
It feels more realistic... and more usable.
Web3 talks a lot about trust, but tools like this actually start to build it in a logical and understandable way.
