the feeling that most people are asking the wrong question about SIGN. #TrumpSaysIranWarHasBeenWon We tend to frame it as a choice. Either it wins because it is an open standard, or it wins because it builds strong products. That sounds neat, but it misses what actually creates staying power.
What matters is the moment where something verified becomes something usable.
#CLARITYActHitAnotherRoadblock Open systems are great at spreading. They make it easy for anyone to plug in, build, and reuse ideas. But that same openness also makes it easier to replicate. If Sign Protocol becomes just a clean, widely adopted way to issue and verify attestations, that is valuable, but it does not automatically give SIGN a long-term edge. Standards rarely belong to one player forever. They become shared language.#US-IranTalks
On the other side, product gravity feels strong in the beginning. A tool like TokenTable can pull users in because it simplifies something messy. Distribution, eligibility, unlocks, compliance, all of that is painful in practice. When a product reduces that pain, people stick with it. But product gravity fades once others learn the same workflow and rebuild it with fewer constraints. What feels sticky today can become optional tomorrow.#US-IranTalks long open profite all frends