Most people in Web3 don’t really think about auditing—until something breaks.
We lock funds in smart contracts, interact with protocols every day, and assume everything is fine just because someone, somewhere, audited it. But if you look a bit deeper, many of those audits are static.
It’s usually one report, created at a single point in time—and that’s it. There’s no simple way to track what changed afterward or verify things later.
That’s why $SIGN

Protocol stands out to me.
It doesn’t treat auditing as a one-time event. Instead, it treats it as something that can evolve, be revisited, and checked continuously.
Rather than just reading a report, audits can become attestations—real data that’s recorded, shared, and verified across platforms.$ETH

So instead of blindly trusting a label like “audited,” you can actually see proof, follow updates, and understand what’s been verified over time.
It feels more real. More practical. Web3 talks a lot about trust—but tools like this actually start building it in a way that makes sense.