I’ve been sitting with SIGN lately, and it’s quietly fascinating. Not a flashy app, but infrastructure for proving things and moving tokens reliably. It splits verification from distribution—a rare move that actually makes sense. Sign Protocol locks facts cryptographically, TokenTable decides who gets what, when, and how.
What struck me is the simplicity hiding behind all the tech: make facts usable, make distributions predictable. Yet the real test is out there, in messy real-world scenarios, not neat diagrams. Edge cases, incentives, human unpredictability—this is where SIGN will show its real character.
No hype, no big promises—just verification, auditability, selective disclosure, and structure that feels built to survive. I don’t know if it will fully hold up, but something about it keeps me watching. It’s quietly ambitious, and that’s why it’s worth noticing.
