@SignOfficial I think Sign’s edge is that it turns trust from a vague promise into a rules engine. Instead of asking markets to believe an allocation is fair, TokenTable defines who gets what, when, under which claim conditions, and even how revocations or clawbacks work, while Sign Protocol supplies the attestations that prove eligibility and settlement. That matters more than the usual airdrop narrative. In one documented flow, KYC attestations were used to gate claims for about 15,000 recipients, which shows this is already practical, not theoretical. The sign also reported more than 6 million attestations and over $4 billion distributed to 40 million wallets in 2024. My view is that the market still underprices this kind of plumbing. The short-term risk is execution and whether demand for attestations converts into durable token utility; the long-term upside is simple: verified claims can make distribution logic auditable, repeatable, and much harder to game.
@SignOfficial $SIGN #SignDigitalSovereignInfra